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Jones, John (US) wrote on Tue, 20 Sep 2005 19:38:07 GMT: > In all seriousness... > > Install them in a PC with a SCSI card & use a cheap/freeware > DODWipe to zero the drives. > Another option on a machine that is Linux capable is to move an IOA and the disks to a Linux partition, reformat, and use an equivalent Linux utility. While the DST option to destroy disk unit data is relatively simplistic, someone would need to be disk technology and i5/OS savvy to recover any bits & pieces of data off the drive. While the knowledge needed isn't trivial, I'd imagine that in most cases drives from an iSeries that will be resold will go to another iSeries customer who isn't going to take the time or effort to attempt to discover what was previously on the units. And remember as soon as you begin to add the units to a different iSeries, they'll get reformated again, potentially get parity stripes created (maybe in a different location than they were previously), and if added to a disk pool with add & balance option, have data placed on the drive. If the drives don't got to another iSeries, as soon as the drives get reformated to non- iSeries use, you have effectively made another pass across the data and mucked up the sector sizes in such a manner that the level of knowledge needed to recover data has increased again. All this nattering simply points out that the risk of data recovery is not zero, but it also isn't very probably either.
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