Linux: How do to permanently disable hard drives?
If the disks are SATA (the most normal thing; they
are sda, sdb, etc. you can do that two ways:
- After the boot, you can disable them. The "magic" is (as root)
echo 1 >
/sys/block/sdx/device/delete
where sdx is your disk. This will make the device disappear. Notice however that if something triggers an update of udev the disks may reappear.
Note also that the sdx denomination is not completely fixed; it can change especially if you add/delete disks to the system.
where sdx is your disk. This will make the device disappear. Notice however that if something triggers an update of udev the disks may reappear.
Note also that the sdx denomination is not completely fixed; it can change especially if you add/delete disks to the system.
- At boot level, if you have a kernel with version 3.13 or newer. You need to identify the ATA address, which is a number like 4.00
dmesg | grep ata
ata4.00: ATA-8: ST2000DM001-1CH164, CC24, max UDMA/133
and you can completely hide the disk with the boot parameter:
ata4.00: ATA-8: ST2000DM001-1CH164, CC24, max UDMA/133
and you can completely hide the disk with the boot parameter:
libata.force=4.00:disable
the disk will act as if it was not connected at all to the system.
the disk will act as if it was not connected at all to the system.
- Another option is using udev rules as explained (I did not test) here. The difference, in this case, is that the disk devices are still there, but the disks are not mounted. In 99% of the case, the result is the same, unless you are playing tricks with directly writing to the raw disk devices...
I do not own the copyright on this.