HDDerase.exe MD5 hash = D708E610BF123C840CC1482E52B22DDF SHA1 = 27100fbfd1f25fec3d03f94071430c540a935fd0 Erases all data on a hard disk drive - a freeware utility, version 4.0 9/20/2008 ======================================================================== I. Introduction II. Revision history III. Creating a boot disk IV. Instructions for using HDDerase.exe V. FAQ I. Introduction ---------------- HDDerase.exe is a DOS-based utility that securely erases "sanitizes" all data on ATA hard disk drives in Intel architecture computers (PCs). It offers the option to run the drive internal secure erase command, security erase unit, based on the ATA specification by the T13 technical committee. To run the utility make a floppy, recordable CD-R, or USB DOS bootable disk; then copy HDDerase.exe to the bootable media. Reboot the computer with the floppy, CD-R, or USB inserted, and type "hdderase" at the system DOS prompt. Make sure to set the correct priority boot order in the system BIOS, such as first boot floppy, CD-R, or USB depending on which media is used to run HDDerase.exe. HDDerase.exe must be run from an actual DOS environment and not a Window based DOS command prompt environment. SUPPORT: Our sponsor, the National Security Agency, has ended their support of our program, and consequently we have no support staff to respond to problems. If you are having difficulty running the program, and have tried the readme.txt files on our website, then the easiest way to get drives securely erased is to connect the drive to a different PC and run hdderase.exe on it. This is particularly convenient if you have several drives to erase. *NOTE: For laptop users, please make sure that there is sufficient battery life to run and complete the secure erase procedure. Secure erase may take as long as two hours for larger capacity drives. If power is lost during the secure erase, the drive will be in a locked state, preventing all I/O access. See the FAQ for further discussion on this topic. II. Revision history ---------------------- 4.0 - Released 9/20/2008 - Added a system clock to print out the current time during the secure erase command. - Added new item in the options menu to switch between different attached hard drives without exiting the program. - Added new item in the options menu to unlock unlock drives with HDDErase passwords as well as user defined user or master passwords. - HDDErase now displays the password being set on the drive before the secure erase command is issued. A message is printed to the screen when the passwords are unlocked as well. - Added warning message to inform users to run HDDErase from AC power and not the laptop battery. - Added an audit log failed message that is printed only to the removable media when a secure erase command does not complete successfully. - Changed menu header displays. - Updated MD5 hash and added SHA1 hash. 3.3 - Released 11/17/2007 - Fixed displaced bit in the enhanced secure erase option. Enhanced secure erase command is now issued correctly. 3.2 - Released 6/7/2007 - HDDerase sets user password as "idrive" before performing (enhanced) secure erase. HDDerase also attempts to unlock drive with passwords from previous versions. - Program now attempts to turn on security feature set via "device configuration set" and then "device configuration restore" if the feature set is not enabled. - If selected drive is locked with a non-HDDerase password the user is given the option to: 1) unlock with user password, 2) unlock with master password (if high security), 3) secure erase with user password, 4) secure erase with master password, 5) enhanced secure erase with user password (if supported), 6) enhanced secure erase with master password (if supported). If option 3, 4, 5 or 6 is selected any possible HPA and/or DCO areas will not be reset. - If the system BIOS executes a "security freeze lock" command upon drive detection HDDerase attempts to bypass this. A hard reboot is required if the attempt is successful. Afterwards HDDerase should be run once more and the drive should not be in a frozen state. HDDerase will not attempt to bypass if a HPA is set. NOTE: This internal method may not work on all drives (MAXTOR drives for sure) and the FAQ should be checked for other methods to bypass the BIOS freeze lock. - Upper limit of non-user accessible areas (HPa/DCO) is word 3-6 of "device configuration identify" if device configuration overlay feature set is supported, "read native max address ext" if 48-bit addressing is supported, or "read native max address" if neither are supported. - fixed bugs related to drives that do not support 48-bit addressing. - fixed bugs related to drives that do not support device configuration overlays. - md5 hash updated in HDDeraseReadMe.txt for HDDerase.exe version 3.2 3.1 - Released 1/27/2007 - Program now checks for the existence of a host protected area and/or device configuration overlay, and gives the option to remove such areas. Upon requesting the removal of these areas, subsequent "set max address (ext)" and "device configuration restore" commands are issued--resetting the maximum user space to the native factory size so that a secure erase will erase all drive sectors. NOTE: These areas are not normally used for user data and need only to be sanitized for the most sensitive users of hdderase.exe. - md5 hash updated in HDDeraseReadMe.txt for HDDerase.exe version 3.1 3.0 - Released 12/12/2006 - Only two options are now available, secure erase unit and enhanced secure erase. All other methods have been removed. - Added audit trail after secure erase unit completes. When a secure erase or enhanced secure erase completes successfully, an erase completion message and time stamp are written to LBA sector 0 of erased drive. It will also print the same message to a log file "se_log.log" if possible. The log file is amended and updated each time the program completes a successful security erase or enhanced secure erase, creating a log of all completed erasures. - Program now checks for the existence of a host protected area and device configuration overlay. If any of the two exists, then a message is printed to the screen alerting the user of the number of sector(s) in the host protected area or device configuration overlay. These areas may or may not be erased, depending on the manufacturer. No changes are made to the drive's configuration. - Added error message if security remains enabled after a secure erase. This indicates that the process did not finish successfully. - Set passwords changed from high to maximum security. - Added md5 hash in HDDeraseReadMe.txt for HDDerase.exe 2.0b - Released 10/11/2004 - Four drive erase options: secure erase unit, fast erase, single pass overwrite, and multi-pass overwrite. III. Creating a boot disk -------------------------- * To make a floppy DOS boot disk Download and run DOS 6.22 boot disk maker from www.bootdisk.com/bootdisk.htm. Erase the two Qbasic files from the created floppy to make enough room to copy HDDerase.exe onto the disk. * Windows ME Insert a floppy disk into drive A: double-click my computer on the desktop, right-click on floppy drive A: and select format from the resulting menu and click start. After the floppy is formatted, double-click drive C:, double-click the WINDOWS folder, double-click the COMMAND folder, double-click the EBD folder, click once on the COMMAND.COM file to highlight it, hold the Ctrl key and click the IO.SYS file to highlight this file as well, right-click on the IO.SYS file, select copy from the resulting menu, right-click the floppy drive A: and select paste from the resulting menu. * Windows 2000 Insert the Windows 2000 Professional CD. Open a command prompt and switch to the CD by typing in the drive letter and pressing enter. Type \Valueadd\3rdparty\Ca_Antiv and press enter. Now insert a floppy disk into floppy drive A: and then type makedisk and press enter. After the disk has been created, delete unnecessary files from the floppy to make enough room for HDDerase.exe * Windows XP Insert a floppy disk into drive A: double-click my computer on desktop, right- click on floppy drive A: select format from the resulting menu, check create an MS-DOS startup disk and click start. *Creating a bootable CD-R HDDerase v3.1 can be found on the "Ultimate Boot CD v4.1.1" which can be downloaded for free at: http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/download.html Burn the ISO image to a blank CD-R using your preferred recording software. Remember to change your boot priority settings in BIOS to boot from the CD-ROM drive first. If you wish to create your own bootable CD-R, follow the instructions at the following link: http://www.nu2.nu/bootcd/#cdromsi *Creating a bootable USB drive HDDerase v3.1 can be found on the "Ultimate Boot CD v4.1.1" which can be downloaded for free at: http://www.ultimatebootcd.com/download.html Extract the files from the ISO file using a free/shareware utility such as Undisker (http://www.undisker.com/) to a directory on your hard drive. Use a command/shell window and enter the command \tools\ubcd2usb\ubcd2usb.cmd This command will completely erase and reformat your usb stick. Remember to change your boot priority settings in BIOS to boot from the USB stick first. If your BIOS does not support USB devices as a boot option then you can not boot from a USB drive. IV. Instructions for using HDDerase.exe ---------------------------------------- *NOTE: For laptop users, please make sure that there is sufficient battery life to run and complete the secure erase procedure. Secure erase may take as long as two hours for larger capacity drives. If power is lost during the secure erase, the drive will be in a locked state, preventing all I/O access. See the FAQ for further discussion on this topic. Copy the downloaded file, HDDerase.exe onto the created floppy/CD-R/USB bootable DOS disk. Boot the computer in DOS using the bootable disk. Make sure to set the correct boot priority setting in the system BIOS. Type "hdderase" at system/DOS prompt to run HDDerase.exe. All ATA hard disk drives connected to the main system board will be identified and their information displayed. For PATA drives, make sure that the jumpers on the hard disk drives are correctly configured. Avoid setting the jumpers to CS (cable select) on the hard disk drives. Master or slave jumper setting is preferred. Example screen output for a typical, non-locked drive: 1. ******************************************************************************* | SECURE ERASE FREEWARE: COMPLETELY ERASE YOUR HARD DISK DRIVE | | Version 4.0 | ******************************************************************************* P0 is Hitachi HTS722016K9SA00 P1 is NONE S0 is NONE S1 is WD75AA-00BAA0 Please select a drive Enter P0 for primary master Enter S1 for secondary slave Enter EX to exit the program PLEASE ENTER YOUR SELECTION: p0 2. Active HDD: Hitachi HTS722016K9SA00 **************************************************** | This drive supports the ATA security feature set | | This drive supports enhanced secure erase | **************************************************** Do you want to procede to the options menu? (Y/N) y 3. ********************************************************** | Active HDD: Hitachi HTS722016K9SA00 | +--------------------------------------------------------+ | Enter 1 for executing secure erase | | Enter 2 for executing enhanced secure erase | | Enter C to change the active HDD | | Enter E to exit the program | ********************************************************** Please enter your selection: 1 4. +----------------------------------------------------------+ | It is required to set a password to the HDD to perfom a | | SECURE ERASE. | | Setting HDD security with the following password: idrive | | Set password command: Successful! | +----------------------------------------------------------+ Do you want to proceed? (Y/N) y The estimated duration of this process is: 120 minutes The secure erase started now at: Sat Apr 12 12:52:12 Sept 2008 The current time is: 14:50:21 Secure erase complete Audit log successfully written to LBA sector 0 Do you wish to view LBA sector 0? (Y/N): Y This drive: Serial number = 070526DP0D00DVG0L9KA, Model = Hitachi HTS722016K9SA00 was successfully erased on...Sat Apr 12 14:50:21 2008 To go back to the options menu press ENTER . . . HDDerase.exe menu 1: Secure Erase This uses the ATA internal drive secure erase command. It offers a higher level of secure erase than block overwriting software utilities. It can take 30 to 180 minutes depending on the drive’s capacity and speed. Drive will be left unlocked and ready for use once the process has successfully completed. 2: Enhanced Secure Erase (if supported by the drive) An optional ATA internal drive secure erase command. Drive will be left unlocked and ready for use once the process has successfully completed. Not all ATA drives support this erase method and if it does not, then you will not be given this option. C: Change Active HDD An option to allow the user to switch between multiples drives. L: Unlock a locked drive (if drive is locked) This option automatically tries to unlock the drive with all known HDDErase passwords. If this fails, the user is prompted for the correct user or master password on the drive. HDDErase will try to unlock the drive with the given password as both a user password and a master password. If your drive is not locked then you will not be given this option. Notes HDDerase.exe tests whether a drive is new enough to support the ATA Security Feature Set. If so (drives larger than about 15 to 20 GB), the secure erase option will be available. ATA drives more than several years old (generally smaller than 15GB) will not support the ATA Security Feature Set. If secure erase command execution is interrupted by restart or a power cycle before completion, the drive will be left in locked state. Run the program again after reboot and successfully execute any of the secure erase options or the unlock option to unlock the drive. Computer BIOS should be set to boot from the floppy drive A:, USB drive, or CD-ROM drive, depending on which media type is used to boot the system into DOS. The Windows Disk Management system program can be used to partition and format a secure erased disk, for reuse. V. FAQ ------- Q: My laptop shut down before the secure erase ended, etc... Now my hard drive is locked with a password. How do I unlock it? A: Normally if the secure erase procedure does not complete HDDerase can be run again and unlock your drive and then complete the erase procedure. An audit trail will be written to LBA 0 to confirm this. The unlock option ("U" from the options menu) can also be used to automatically remove HDDErase set passwords. If you are unable to run HDDerase again the user password that is set for HDDerase v3.2 is: "idrive". The user password that is set for all versions of HDDerase v3.1 and below is: "xty3fgds2h32j4kd02k9rfgep36435". A number of free utilities are available to unlock drives with a known password, such as atapwd (http://www.rockbox.org/lock.html) and MHDD (http://hddguru.com/content/en) to name a few. Please verify the correct version you are using and unlock with the appropiate password, then disable withthe same password. Q: What is the difference between secure erase and enhanced secure erase? A: Secure erase overwrites all user data areas with binary zeroes. Enhanced secure erase writes predetermined data patterns (set by the manufacturer) to all user data areas, including sectors that are no longer in use due to reallocation. ***NOTE: the enhanced secure erase option is not supported by all ATA drives. Q: How certain can I be that this program will erase all my data beyond recovery? A: Dozens of hard disk drives have been tested at the Center for Magnetic Recording Research (CMRR) for the functionality of the secure erase command. All hard drives that have been found to support the secure erase feature overwrite all user LBAs to binary zeroes. Q: Is there government approval for secure erase, that meets current federal and state lows, like Sarbanes-Oxley, the Health Information Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), the Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA), the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA), and California Senate Bill 1386? A: According to federal data sanitization document NIST 800-88, acceptable methods include executing the in-drive Secure Erase command, degaussing a drive, and physical destruction. Q: I receive "This drive is in frozen status" and "!! ATA Security Feature Set is prohibited by the system BIOS chip !!" messages. What does this mean? A: Some BIOS chips prohibit the secure erase option (they issue a Security Freeze Lock command when the drive boots up). This is supposed to prevent ATA passwords from being set maliciously by malware once the OS has loaded. HDDerase attempts to bypass this, but if HDDerase is unsuccessful there are three other possible ways to bypass the security freeze lock (see following question). Q: How can I bypass security freeze lock? A: Three different ways can bypass a BIOS security freeze lock: 1. Most preferred method: If another computer is available, boot the drive from another computer. Since the freeze lock is entirely BIOS dependent, another computer's BIOS may not freeze lock the drive. 2. Second method: Switch the drive to another drive channel or another position on the channel, e.g. Switch drive from secondary master S0 to secondary slave S1 or vice versa. Some BIOSs do not send the Freeze Lock command to all channel master/slave positions. 3. Least preferred method: **There exists some danger to your drive in using this method, use at your own risk** Shut down the computer system. Unplug the four-wire power cable of the hard drive while leaving the signal cable plugged in. To eliminate the danger of ESD, always ground yourself when removing the power cord. Power on the system and boot into DOS with a DOS boot disk. Once DOS has booted up and you are at a command line interface plug the power cord of the hard drive back in. Run HDDerase.exe. The logic in this method is to prevent the drives detection in BIOS, which is when the freeze lock command is issued. Q: Can HDDerase.exe be used to erase my onboard or externally connected (USB, etc.) SATA drives? A: Yes, but some BIOS configuration may be required. Since HDDerase.exe only detects drives on the primary and secondary IDE channels (ports 01F0-01F7 and 0170-0177) the BIOS must be configured so that the SATA drive is detected one of these channels. For onboard SATA drives this can be done by switching the SATA drive from "enhanced mode" to "compatibility mode" in BIOS (compatibility mode is sometimes called "native mode" or "IDE mode"). E.g. BIOS >> IDE configuration >> onboard IDE operate mode >> compatibility mode. Note - not all BIOSs support this feature. Q: Can hdderase.exe be used to erase my SCSI or USB drives? A: No. Hdderase.exe is intended to be used only on SATA/ATA drives and will not work with SCSI or USB drives. There is at least one commercial company (http://www.deadondemand.com/ or http://ensconcedata.com) making "data shredder" machines offering data erasure of any drive, including SCSI. Q: What are HPA and DCO areas? A: HPA is an acronym for Host Protected Area. A HPA is a portion of sectors at the end of the hard drive that can not be addressed by the user. Normally this area is used to store hard drive diagnostic or recovery type software, but any type of data may reside in this area. DCO is an acronym for Device Configuration Overlay. Similar to a HPA, a DCO represents a portion at the end of the hard drive that is not user addressable. Both these areas are NOT overwritten when a windows format, secure/enhanced erase, or any other overwrite method is performed. In order for these areas to be erased they have to be first removed, and only then can the entire drive be erased (see the following question). ***Note: In our testing some drives overwrite the HPA when a secure erase is performed, but most drives do not erase this area when a secure erase is performed. CMRR contends that HPA erasure is not mandatory because user data is not stored there; however HDDerase offers erasure of both areas for maximum erase security. Q: Can hdderase.exe erase the host protected area (HPA) or the device configuration overlay area (DCO)? A: Yes. A message will appear if a HPA and/or DCO exist(s) on the selected drive and prompt the user if he/she wants the areas to be erased. Accepting removes the HPA and/or DCO via set max address (ext) and device configuration restore commands, respectively. A subsequent secure erase will then erase the entire drive. Declining leaves the HPA and/or DCO intact, and a subsequent secure erase may or may not erase over the HPA/DCO, depending on the manufacturer. CMRR Secure Erase protocol requires erasure only of all user-accesible records. If your drive is locked by a non-HDDerase password and if either option 3, 4, 5, or 6 is chosen, then the HPA and/or DCO will NOT be detected or reset. ***Note: the device configuration restore command disables ANY settings previously made by a device configuration set command--thereby placing the drive in its factory default state. Q: Can HDDerase.exe be run under Windows XP? A: Usually no, but it can be done with a kernel mode driver. A kernel mode driver can give the user direct access to the IDE I/O ports that can not normally be accessed in a Windows NT/XP environment (see following question on how to do this). It is not recommended to run HDDerase.exe in a Windows NT/XP environment because of conflicts that may occur when opening the ports. The preferred method is booting up the system in a true DOS environment and then running HDDerase.exe. Q: Where can I find a kernel mode driver that will give me access to the IDE I/O ports? A: http://www.embeddedtronics.com/design&ideas.html >> UserPort.zip. Follow the installation instructions and add the I/O ports for the IDE channel you want to use. Normally the I/O ports for the primary channel are: 1F0-1F7 and 3F6-3F6, and the ports for the secondary channel are: 170-177 and 376-376. You may check you systems IDE ports by going to >> My computer >> properties >> hardware tab >> device manager >> IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers >> primary/secondary IDE channel >> properties >> resources.