1 / 9

Mass Storage Media Locking

Mass Storage Media Locking. By Curtis E. Stevens WD. Agenda. The Problem ATA Security OS Detction Possible Approaches. The Problem. Small or externally attached devices can be lost or stolen USB 1394 SATA PATA CFA Many of these devices accept SCSI CDB’s as their primary commands.

ophira
Download Presentation

Mass Storage Media Locking

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mass Storage Media Locking By Curtis E. Stevens WD

  2. Agenda • The Problem • ATA Security • OS Detction • Possible Approaches

  3. The Problem • Small or externally attached devices can be lost or stolen • USB • 1394 • SATA • PATA • CFA • Many of these devices accept SCSI CDB’s as their primary commands

  4. ATA Security • ATA Security was introduced in ATA/ATAPI-4 in 1997 and has been developed over a period of 7 years • Provides the ability to password lock a device • Provides a mechanism to erase the media and the passwords in the normal security mode • Can turn the drive into a brick if passwords are lost in the high security mode.

  5. Commands • Security Disable Password • Turns off the password subsystem • Security Erase Prepare • Security Erase is a 2 step process • Security Erase Unit • Erase the media and as a last dying act, erase the passwords • Security Freeze Lock • Prevent changes until the next power cycle • Security Set Password • Enable the password subsystem • Security Unlock • Open a password protected drive.

  6. ATA Security • Prevents the average user from gaining access to the data • Protects the device, not the data • Has been in use and tested for several years • Implementation is light and well understood • Other more complex methods are still being developed, but ATA style security can be implemented now.

  7. OS Detection • Some existing operating system standard drivers do not assign a drive letter if they are unable to read the media • A locked device needs to be understood as locked • If the operating system does not have the capability to unlock the device it should prompt the user for a driver • Detection is probably going to be bus specific

  8. Proposal #1 • Use the SAT ATA pass through mechanism or create a new SCSI CDB that enables the 6 ATA security commands • Use Inquiry byte 1 bit 0 to indicate that a device is locked • Define a security mode page to indicate that security is implemented and the current status of the drive

  9. Proposal #2 • Define a mode page for locking and unlocking • Change write same to clear password where appropriate • Require Mode Select prior to write same • Use byte 1/10 bits 3 or 4 to indicate security erase.

More Related