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October 28th, 2024 05:00

Wiping data of U.2 NVMe SSD from PowerStore 1000X, without 1000X

Hello.
Is there a way to wipe the data of the U.2 NVMe SSD mounted on the PowerStore 1000X?

I am operating one PowerStore 1000T and one Powerstore 1000X in Korea. The 1000X has a firmware failure, so I am going to take it to the after-sales service center in Korea. More precisely, the internal hypervisor that runs PowerOS is not working. The problem is that according to our company policy, I must receive data wiping if I want to take the hard disk out.

The SSD model number is MZ-WLJ3T8A. As you know, U.2 NVMe SSD is only used in the latest servers, so I think it will not be installed and compatible with general-purpose PCs. In fact, I tried to recognize the SSD with an adapter on a general-purpose PC, but it did not work well. Also, Dell Korea said that they do not know how to do it.

I have PowerStore 1000T and Dell R450 server. Can I wipe the data by installing them or by purchasing a new PCI module?

If there is no way to wipe the data, here are the countermeasures I can think of:
1. Purchase a new SSD of the same model and send it to the after-sales service center with the 1000X hardware for firmware installation and initialization.
2. Add the SSD from the 1000X to the PowerStore 1000T and reuse it.

Thanks

4 Operator

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2.3K Posts

October 28th, 2024 09:26

Dell PowerStore runs D@are  by default and PowerStore Disks are always SED (Self Encrypted) and without your Recoverykey i would say nobody can extract your data back into a usable format.

Please ask Dell about that.

I use a couple of (Non Dell) U2. PCIe Adapter cards in my Dell Servers and i cant see a reason why they shouldnt work in a PC too.

Regards,
Joerg

9 Legend

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8.1K Posts

October 28th, 2024 05:49

If you have access to Dell fixed workstations with NVMe flexbay, those can read and wipe U.2 SSD.

For instant, Precision 5820, 7820, 7920.

(edited)

1 Rookie

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3 Posts

February 27th, 2025 00:46

@Origin3k

Hi, thank you for your reply.

Despite your kind reply, my company policy is that I had to explicitly erase the data. I found out how to do it and was able to initialize the disk and erase the data with a tool called sedutil.

However, I was not able to initialize the nvme nvram used for cache. I am looking into this. Since it does not use opal 2.0, I think it uses its own protocol.

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February 27th, 2025 00:52

@Chino de Oro​ 

Hi, thank you for your kind reply.

I was able to access the SSD by inserting the U.2 Nvme PCie card into my regular PC. Although it was locked, I was able to unlock it with the sedutil tool. I was able to find the value called PSID on the front of the SSD and initialize and erase the data using the `--PSIDrevert` option.

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