Version 1 vs 2
Version 1 vs 2
Content Changes
Content Changes
https://nondeterministic.computer/@mjg59/111853539159874427
> If Windows has booted on a system and provisioned the TPM, it'll set a random owner password. This is a problem on Linux if you want to do anything that requires owner auth (most operations don't), but you can fix it by doing:
>
> `echo 5 >/sys/class/tpm/tpm0/ppi/request
>
> and rebootiing. This asks the firmware to clear all TPM contents. Obviously, this invalidates all existing secrets (including Bitlocker keys, so you'll need to recover that if you dual boot)
https://nondeterministic.computer/@mjg59/111853539159874427
> If Windows has booted on a system and provisioned the TPM, it'll set a random owner password. This is a problem on Linux if you want to do anything that requires owner auth (most operations don't), but you can fix it by doing:
>
> `echo 5 >/sys/class/tpm/tpm0/ppi/request`
>
> and rebootiing. This asks the firmware to clear all TPM contents. Obviously, this invalidates all existing secrets (including Bitlocker keys, so you'll need to recover that if you dual boot)
https://nondeterministic.computer/@mjg59/111853539159874427
> If Windows has booted on a system and provisioned the TPM, it'll set a random owner password. This is a problem on Linux if you want to do anything that requires owner auth (most operations don't), but you can fix it by doing:
>
> `echo 5 >/sys/class/tpm/tpm0/ppi/request`
>
> and rebootiing. This asks the firmware to clear all TPM contents. Obviously, this invalidates all existing secrets (including Bitlocker keys, so you'll need to recover that if you dual boot)