Date: Wed, 25 Jan 2012 08:13:28 +0100 From: Fritz Wuehler <fritz@spamexpire-201201.rodent.frell.theremailer.net> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: zpool detach pool device Message-ID: <e73d7afb29621498d5aebe5fc7ae6666@msgid.frell.theremailer.net> In-Reply-To: <20120124150217.GA10327@icarus.home.lan>
next in thread | previous in thread | raw e-mail | index | archive | help
> All DBAN does is write {whatever-source-you-choose} to the drive > basically with dd (it's actually a separate wrapper program but it > behaves identically to dd). Just use dd and avoid the hassle of downloading and burning a cd that does dd. dban is nice if you have to do a garage full of machines or are a Windows victim but if you know your way around UNIX why bother with dban? I recently had some drives fail and I did dd from /dev/urandom > 4) If you ever plan on re-using this drive in a system, please do not > use the PRNG method or similar methods ("write random jibberish all over > the drive"). This is almost guaranteed to confuse a system (ANY system) > the next time you insert the disk; data is written to the MBR and > partition table regions which is gobbledegook, resulting in the > underlying BIOS, OS, or anything else trying to parse that data, and > thus begins behaving weirdly/oddly ("what do you mean I can't partition > this disk?" "Yeah, there's an HP/UX partition on this thing, > right..."). I speak from personal experience on this matter. As such, > I always advocate people zero their drives and not to pick the defaults. Interesting. I have never had this happen but I always partition the drives or label them before trying to do anything after a spring cleaning. If this is your only objection to nonzero values it still is a good compromise to dd the whole drive with /dev/urandom and then just blast the MBR from /dev/zero its only 512 bytes.
Want to link to this message? Use this URL: <https://mail-archive.FreeBSD.org/cgi/mid.cgi?e73d7afb29621498d5aebe5fc7ae6666>