Unfortunately VeraCrypt has discontinued support for TrueCrypt volumes as of version 1.26.7 (October 1st, 2023). I can confirm that with the latest version of VeraCrypt I am no longer able to open TC volumes and there is no longer an option for "TrueCrypt Mode". They are now officially recommending an older version to access TC volumes. Therefore remove references to Truecrypt from the script if you do not use such a volume, or select one of the none Truecrypt mounting options or use a Veracrypt...
October 2022 update: Powershell script now includes example for three mounted disks, simpler code, faster input.
Who is this for? Have you previously made an encrypted ext4 formatted drive to use with a Linux distro but now have moved to Windows 10 and would like to continue using the encrypted drive without permanently decrypting it to be recognisable? This guide is for you! Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) saves the day! It's now possible to mount Linux filesystem drives inside Windows and access them natively without relying on third-party software like DiskInternals Linux Reader: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-insider/Active-Dev-Branch#build-20211...
@ehheh1000, I think you should ask on the Macrium Reflect support forums.
Hi @ehheh1000, this guide is for opening a Linux filesystem formatted drive within the Windows OS conveniently and explaining the order of steps to do so. Correct me if I am wrong but I believe you are describing an imaged file of a drive's contents, right? Was this imaged file of an encrypted NTFS drive made on Windows or something formatted by a Linux OS? If it's NTFS made by Windows do you know how to decrypt the imaged file/volume from Veracrypt GUI? Here is an easy guide for you: https://tdicomputing.dartmouth.edu/veracrypt-mounting-encrypted-volumes-containers/...
Hi @ehheh1000, this guide is for opening a Linux filesystem formatted drive within the Windows OS conveniently and explaining the order of steps to do so. Correct me if I am wrong but I believe you are describing an imaged file of a drive's contents, right? Was this imaged file of an encrypted NTFS drive made on Windows or something formatted by a Linux OS? If it's NTFS made by Windows do you know how to decrypt the imaged file/volume from Veracrypt GUI? Here is an easy guide for you: https://tdicomputing.dartmouth.edu/veracrypt-mounting-encrypted-volumes-containers/...
Hi @ehheh1000, this guide is for opening a Linux filesystem formatted drive within the Windows OS conveniently and explaining the order of steps to do so. Correct me if I am wrong but I believe you are describing an imaged file of a drive's contents, right? Was this imaged file of an encrypted NTFS drive made on Windows or something formatted by a Linux OS? If it's NTFS made by Windows do you know how to decrypt the imaged file/volume from Veracrypt GUI? Here is an easy guide for you: https://tdicomputing.dartmouth.edu/veracrypt-mounting-encrypted-volumes-containers/...
Hi @DDD, this guide is for opening a Linux filesystem formatted drive within the Windows OS conveniently and explaining the order of steps to do so. Correct me if I am wrong but I believe you are describing an imaged file of a drive's contents, right? Was this imaged file of an encrypted NTFS drive made on Windows or something formatted by a Linux OS? If it's NTFS made by Windows do you know how to decrypt the imaged file/volume from Veracrypt GUI? Here is an easy guide for you: https://tdicomputing.dartmouth.edu/veracrypt-mounting-encrypted-volumes-containers/...