- Aug 25, 2001
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I need to "wipe" an SSD and a 1TB WD HDD, in an older Sandy Bridge-era Dell PC.
Was thinking of using Linux boot USB, and using the "Disks" tool. Does it offer an "easy Secure Erase" feature? I used to know how to do it command-line style with HDParm, but with my aging brain, that esoterica has started to escape me.
The box in question was running Win10, and after I wipe the disks, I'm going to re-install Win10 (as per owner's wishes). But is a re-format "enough", or should I look into doing a secure erase? Just run "sudo dd" on the SSD, for the first million sectors or whatever MS's "DISKPART" tool does with "CLEAN"?
I just don't want to accidentally allow any potential rootkit to escape onto my LAN (will be doing the disk wipe(s) with the ethernet disconnected), and don't want it to survive a re-format if it's a "bootkit".
Was thinking of using Linux boot USB, and using the "Disks" tool. Does it offer an "easy Secure Erase" feature? I used to know how to do it command-line style with HDParm, but with my aging brain, that esoterica has started to escape me.
The box in question was running Win10, and after I wipe the disks, I'm going to re-install Win10 (as per owner's wishes). But is a re-format "enough", or should I look into doing a secure erase? Just run "sudo dd" on the SSD, for the first million sectors or whatever MS's "DISKPART" tool does with "CLEAN"?
I just don't want to accidentally allow any potential rootkit to escape onto my LAN (will be doing the disk wipe(s) with the ethernet disconnected), and don't want it to survive a re-format if it's a "bootkit".