But first, to benefit from the encryption, I needed to encrypt the underlying encryption keys. It’s a self-encrypting drive where data is always stored with AES-256 encryption. If the password is randomised it should totally warn the user about of the possibility of making the drive locked in case of a power surge or an interrupt of any kind.Recently I purchased a Samsung 840 Pro SSD for my frayed old notebook (a Thinkpad X200s). I am not a programmer and cannot read source code of the tool to find info about where the password comes from by myself.ĭoes anybody know if this tool randomises the password for every drive it erases, and I'm stuck with like 10 ATA PASSWORD locked drives that are basically junk, or does it use some standard password for each erase?Ĭould please anybody provide me some info, or some contact to the DEVS of the tool so I could analyse the tool to the point of knowing if it's worth my time even trying to guess a password. I've been looking around for a detailed manual for the DISKS utility, but I cannot find anything more than a brief page that states what does the utility do. I've tried using MHDD to unlock my drives which are now inaccessible, but my SUDO password doesn't seem to unlock them. I know the secure erase command needs to lock the drive with an ATA password prior to erasing. My system supports SATA HOT PLUG, and during quite a few of disks swaps the power connectors to some drives have moved and the erase was interrupted. I chose to use the SATA SECURE ERASE method of cleaning the drives, as it clears the whole disk surface, not only the blocks the OS is able to see, and is considered as the most secure one. I have been using the Gnome Disks utility to make sure the disks leave my company clean and all of my data is erased. I've been using Lubuntu testbench to format many HDD prior to sale.
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December 2022
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