@Dimitri Thanks for your comments. I understand where you are coming
from.

I do think, however, that as Ubuntu is intended (and was intended right
from day 1) to be "for human beings", it would make hugely more sense to
support full-system encryption from the installer. People don't want to
be messing around with "install this, then install that, then fix this
other thing" especially as it's neither documented nor supported by
Canonical.

That's just life.

While technical people love messing around — it's their job, after all!
— your average "human being" hates it. (I also dislike it; I put
together the method simply because I needed it. I documented the process
publicly because I know that there are many, many people like me who
need it.)

Also, I have never had good results from installing a desktop
environment over an existing system, even something as simple as Lubuntu
desktop over an Ubuntu installation.

That, too, is just life.

This request is something that Ubuntu should support. It's not a "nice
to have" feature. In today's world, it's a a "got to have" feature,
whether for business, government, professionals, salespeople, scientific
research, and even personal use. (If I could program, I'd amend the
installer myself to implement this — it is open source, after all).

This is made even more urgent by the fact that Ubuntu 18.04 no longer
supports encryption at all. Even the recommended workaround, fscrypt, is
broken.

I cannot understand the antagonism to this request — it's a proven
method; it's not particularly difficult; it's easy enough to modify the
existing installer to do this; it's significantly better than the
existing options; it uses only proven technology; and it would prove
hugely popular, helping to tip the balance to switch to Ubuntu in
organisations that are currently uncertain.

I know that I were an internal sysadmin, or a consultant to a
professional (I used to be both, decades ago), up to version 16.04 I
would have recommended Ubuntu every time without hesitation. But, from
18.04, I absolutely would not, because it's too problematic to install
with encryption and then keep it reliably up to date.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1773457

Title:
  Full-system encryption needs to be supported out-of-the-box including
  /boot and should not delete other installed systems

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