** Description changed:

  Ubuntu 12.10
  
  When installing my system, I selected to encrypt access to my system.
  This prompted me to enter a password. I entered a password with a #
  symbol in it, however due to using an english keyboard, this would not
  have been correctly recorded as a #, but as a ' instead - leading it to
  refuse my password when booting.
  
  I tested this both connected to and not connected to the internet.
  
  It seems that at the point of entering the password during the
  installer, the keyboard layout was set to en_US. Therefore, when booting
  and having the locale as en_GB - it didn't correctly work.
  
  I tried this with the @ symbol, which when entered was accepted on boot
  by hitting shift+2 (american combination)
  
  I also tried this by entering a password with a £ sign (shift 3 on UK
  keyboard - which would be a # on a US keyboard)
  
  When entering password on boot, entering the password with the # key
  rather than the £ key worked.
  
  In summary - when entering password for encrypting system, keyboard is
  set as a US keyboard layout, which differs from that when booting to
  enter the password if it is changed in a later step.
  
  Proposed solution: Move the keyboard selection / Locale Setup before any
  input boxes. (espescially those where you can't see the contents of
  them!)
  
  <http://goo.gl/YwIcT>: "The “Keyboard layout” screen should appear
  immediately before whichever is the first keyboard-requiring step."
  
- <http://goo.gl/PSaUz>: "Whenever “Encrypt the new Ubuntu installation
+ <https://goo.gl/lDfhcI>: "Whenever “Encrypt the new Ubuntu installation
  for security” is checked, the caption 'You’ll choose a security key in
  just a moment.' should be sensitive. 'Choose a security key' is a
  keyboard-requiring step, so that typing the security key works as
  expected."

** Description changed:

  Ubuntu 12.10
  
  When installing my system, I selected to encrypt access to my system.
  This prompted me to enter a password. I entered a password with a #
  symbol in it, however due to using an english keyboard, this would not
  have been correctly recorded as a #, but as a ' instead - leading it to
  refuse my password when booting.
  
  I tested this both connected to and not connected to the internet.
  
  It seems that at the point of entering the password during the
  installer, the keyboard layout was set to en_US. Therefore, when booting
  and having the locale as en_GB - it didn't correctly work.
  
  I tried this with the @ symbol, which when entered was accepted on boot
  by hitting shift+2 (american combination)
  
  I also tried this by entering a password with a £ sign (shift 3 on UK
  keyboard - which would be a # on a US keyboard)
  
  When entering password on boot, entering the password with the # key
  rather than the £ key worked.
  
  In summary - when entering password for encrypting system, keyboard is
  set as a US keyboard layout, which differs from that when booting to
  enter the password if it is changed in a later step.
  
  Proposed solution: Move the keyboard selection / Locale Setup before any
  input boxes. (espescially those where you can't see the contents of
  them!)
  
  <http://goo.gl/YwIcT>: "The “Keyboard layout” screen should appear
  immediately before whichever is the first keyboard-requiring step."
  
  <https://goo.gl/lDfhcI>: "Whenever “Encrypt the new Ubuntu installation
  for security” is checked, the caption 'You’ll choose a security key in
  just a moment.' should be sensitive. 'Choose a security key' is a
  keyboard-requiring step, so that typing the security key works as
  expected."
+ 
+ It may save time to fix this at the same time as bug 871752.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1047384

Title:
  System Encryption Password set before setting keyboard locale

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bug/1047384/+subscriptions

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to