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Plausible Deniability >  Hidden Volume >  Protection of Hidden Volumes Search






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Protection of Hidden Volumes Against Damage

If you mount a TrueCrypt volume within which there is a hidden volume, you may read data stored on the (outer) volume without any risk. However, if you (or the operating system) need to save data to the outer volume, there is a risk that the hidden volume will get damaged (overwritten). To prevent this, you should protect the hidden volume in a way described in this section.
When mounting an outer volume, type in its password and before clicking OK, click Mount Options:
TrueCrypt GUI


In the Mount Options dialog window, enable the option 'Protect hidden volume against damage caused by writing to outer volume '. In the 'Password to hidden volume' input field, type the password for the hidden volume. Click OK and, in the main password entry dialog, click OK.
TrueCrypt GUI


Both passwords must be correct; otherwise, the outer volume will not be mounted. When hidden volume protection is enabled, TrueCrypt does not actually mount the hidden volume. It only decrypts its header (in RAM) and retrieves information about the size of the hidden volume (from the decrypted header). Then, the outer volume is mounted and any attempt to save data to the area of the hidden volume will be rejected (until the outer volume is dismounted). Note that TrueCrypt never modifies the filesystem (e.g., information about allocated clusters, amount of free space, etc.) within the outer volume in any way. As soon as the volume is dismounted, the protection is lost. When the volume is mounted again, it is not possible to determine whether the volume has used hidden volume protection or not. The hidden volume protection can be activated only by users who supply the correct password (and/or keyfiles) for the hidden volume (each time they mount the outer volume).

As soon as a write operation to the hidden volume area is denied/prevented (to protect the hidden volume), the entire host volume (both the outer and the hidden volume) becomes write-protected until dismounted (the TrueCrypt driver reports the 'invalid parameter' error to the system upon each attempt to write data to the volume). This preserves plausible deniability (otherwise certain kinds of inconsistency within the file system could indicate that this volume has used hidden volume protection). When damage to hidden volume is prevented, a warning is displayed (provided that the TrueCrypt Background Task is enabled – see the chapter TrueCrypt Background Task). Furthermore, the type of the mounted outer volume displayed in the main window changes to 'Outer(!) ':
TrueCrypt GUI


Moreover, the field Hidden Volume Protected in the Volume Properties dialog window says:
'Yes (damage prevented!)'.

Note that when damage to hidden volume is prevented, no information about the event is written to the volume. When the outer volume is dismounted and mounted again, the volume properties will not display the string "damage prevented".

There are several ways to check that a hidden volume is being protected against damage:
  1. A confirmation message box saying that hidden volume is being protected is displayed after the outer volume is mounted (if it is not displayed, the hidden volume is not protected!).

  2. In the Volume Properties dialog, the field Hidden Volume Protected says 'Yes':

  3. The type of the mounted outer volume is Outer:
TrueCrypt GUI



Important: You are the only person who can mount your outer volume with the hidden volume protection enabled (since nobody else knows your hidden volume password). When an adversary asks you to mount an outer volume, you of course must
not mount it with the hidden volume protection enabled. You must mount it as a normal volume (and then TrueCrypt will not show the volume type "Outer" but "Normal"). The reason is that, during the time when an outer volume is mounted with the hidden volume protection enabled, the adversary can find out that a hidden volume exists within the outer volume (he/she will be able to find it out until the volume is dismounted and possibly even some time after the computer has been powered off - see Unencrypted Data in RAM).



Warning: Note that the option 'Protect hidden volume against damage caused by writing to outer volume' in the Mount Options dialog window is automatically disabled after a mount attempt is completed, no matter whether it is successful or not (all hidden volumes that are already being protected will, of course, continue to be protected). Therefore, you need to check that option each time you attempt to mount the outer volume (if you wish the hidden volume to be protected):

TrueCrypt GUI

If you want to mount an outer volume and protect a hidden volume within using cached passwords, then follow these steps: Hold down the Control (Ctrl) key when clicking Mount (or select Mount with Options from the Volumes menu). This will open the Mount Options dialog. Enable the option 'Protect hidden volume against damage caused by writing to outer volume' and leave the password box empty. Then click OK.
If you need to mount an outer volume and you know that you will not need to save any data to it, then the most comfortable way of protecting the hidden volume against damage is mounting the outer volume as read-only (see the section Mount Options).







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