On 26 Jun 2004 at 10:44, Matthew Seaman wrote:
> On Sat, Jun 26, 2004 at 02:38:28AM +0200, MICSKO Viktor wrote:
>
> > Is it possible to setting a *whole* disk read only? I mean the way linux
> > does it with "hdparm -r 1 device". So adding an -o ro parameter to mount
> > isn't enough, I want to b
On Saturday 26 June 2004 22:06, JJB wrote:
> Security Paranoia
> It's very important that you completely understand the impact of
> using the following command will have on your ability to make
> changes to your system.
>
> The simplest thing you can do is set the immutable flag on all
> system bin
On Sat, Jun 26, 2004 at 08:36:49AM -0400,
JJB probably wrote:
> Security Paranoia
> It's very important that you completely understand the impact of
> using the following command will have on your ability to make
> changes to your system.
>
> The simplest thing you can do is set the immutable fla
Security Paranoia
It's very important that you completely understand the impact of
In this case, this is no security paranoia. The thing is that there is
sensitive data on the drives and even a bit of modification is
prohibited, but Viktor needs to *read* the data on the disks but no
cloning is
--
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of MICSKO
Viktor
Sent: Saturday, June 26, 2004 6:46 AM
To: Matthew Seaman
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: setting a disk read only
> > Is it possible to setting a *whole* disk read only? I mean the
way linux
> > does it with "h
> > Is it possible to setting a *whole* disk read only? I mean the way linux
> > does it with "hdparm -r 1 device". So adding an -o ro parameter to mount
> > isn't enough, I want to be sure that the disk is unmodified.
>
> Hmmm... SCSI disks can be physically jumpered to be read-only. I
> should
On Sat, Jun 26, 2004 at 02:38:28AM +0200, MICSKO Viktor wrote:
> Is it possible to setting a *whole* disk read only? I mean the way linux
> does it with "hdparm -r 1 device". So adding an -o ro parameter to mount
> isn't enough, I want to be sure that the disk is unmodified.
>
> (I have to access