> Well this assumption (to encrypt the disc afterward) is not necessarily
> valid. A company is giving away computers to a school or for use for
> children, where no encryption is needed. They require you to wipe the
> drive. (Ok, they should do it themselves to be on the safe side of
> things, but in reality things are different.)

BTW something like "Dan's Boot and Nuke" is an option for this case too. 
But like I said in a previous mail it would be convenient if d-i could do 
this as I usually have d-i disks laying around :)

> If such a udeb exists and the additional option is too much work, could
> you please point me to a howto where the handling of udeb-files is
> described, so I can unpack it manually.

BTW, not a udeb but I did publish instructions on how to use shred

http://lackof.org/taggart/hacking/d-i-tricks/#shred

-- 
Matt Taggart
tagg...@debian.org





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