Two things, mostly related, that I'm trying to find answers to for our security team.
Does this scenario make sense: * Create a filesystem at /users/nfsshare1, user uses it for a while, asks for the filesystem to be deleted * New user asks for a filesystem and is given /users/nfsshare2. What are the chances that they could use some tool or other to read unallocated blocks to view the previous user's data? Related to that, when files are deleted on a ZFS volume over an NFS share, how are they wiped out? Are they zeroed or anything. Same question for destroying ZFS filesystems, does the data lay about in any way? (That's largely answered by the first scenario.) If the data is retrievable in any way, is there a way to a) securely destroy a filesystem, or b) securely erase empty space on a filesystem. I know in some sense those questions don't apply in the way they would to, say, ext3, since a filesystem doesn't have a block until a file is written. Sorry if these questions aren't worded well. I've been in meetings for the last couple hours. - Cameron Hanover chano...@umich.edu "Chaos was the law of nature. Order was the dream of man." --Henry Brooks Adams
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME cryptographic signature
_______________________________________________ zfs-discuss mailing list zfs-discuss@opensolaris.org http://mail.opensolaris.org/mailman/listinfo/zfs-discuss