Secure erase SSD on Lenovo ThinkPad T520 (can't unfreeze SSD, machine reboots on hotplug) The...

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Secure erase SSD on Lenovo ThinkPad T520 (can't unfreeze SSD, machine reboots on hotplug)



The 2019 Stack Overflow Developer Survey Results Are Inhdparm - how to secure erase SATA SSD over USBSo did Lenovo BIOS secure erase just brick my SSD?How do I encrypt Samsung 840 SSD with Bitlocker?How do I erase a Samsung Magician encrypted solid-state drive (SSD)?Is RAPID safe for a Samsung SSD (850 evo)?Is it normal for secure erase on a Samsung SSD to take only a few seconds?Repair an SSD that's been unplugged during Secure EraseSSD secure erase on RAID card (Linux)Purpose of password in SSD Secure Erase - PartedmagicCan I “secure erase” a Samsung SSD without installing it?





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4















I have a ThinkPad T520 and a Samsung 840 EVO 256GB SSD that I'm trying to secure erase.



I cannot secure erase the drive because I cannot unfreeze the drive because I cannot remove then reinsert the drive without the computer rebooting itself (and re-freezing the drive).



I'm sure the concept of "freezing" SSDs and requiring a power cycle to unfreeze makes sense to the autistic basement-monkeys that thought that one up, but I need to find a way to actually perform this task.



Things I've tried so far:




  • Samsung Magician secure erase USB boot disk. Reboot machine, drive is frozen, program instructs disconnect + reconnect drive without powering off machine. I remove drive from internal bay. I reinsert. Machine reboots on reinsert. Drive is re-frozen.

  • Boot to Linux from USB, hoping it was some OS level driver thing. Similar result.

  • Disable SATA AHCI in BIOS. I don't know why this would have an effect but I was grasping at straws. Similar result.

  • Samsung Magician to secure erase drive via USB enclosure. Secure erase not supported over USB, as expected.

  • I already have the latest BIOS. Lenovo has an old BIOS extension for secure erasing SSDs but it does not support the T520, it only supports older machines.


The reboot on reinsert does not occur when I hotplug a Crucial M4. It only occurs with the Samsung 840 EVO. These are the only two drives I have, so I don't know which one is the exception.



My questions:




  1. Why does the machine reboot when I plug in the Samsung and how can I stop this from happening?

  2. If I can't, is there a less ridiculous way to unfreeze an SSD?

  3. If not, is there some way to secure erase an SSD over USB?

  4. If not, how do I secure erase this drive short of purchasing a new computer?










share|improve this question

























  • Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

    – Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:15











  • @techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:18











  • Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:25













  • @Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:36




















4















I have a ThinkPad T520 and a Samsung 840 EVO 256GB SSD that I'm trying to secure erase.



I cannot secure erase the drive because I cannot unfreeze the drive because I cannot remove then reinsert the drive without the computer rebooting itself (and re-freezing the drive).



I'm sure the concept of "freezing" SSDs and requiring a power cycle to unfreeze makes sense to the autistic basement-monkeys that thought that one up, but I need to find a way to actually perform this task.



Things I've tried so far:




  • Samsung Magician secure erase USB boot disk. Reboot machine, drive is frozen, program instructs disconnect + reconnect drive without powering off machine. I remove drive from internal bay. I reinsert. Machine reboots on reinsert. Drive is re-frozen.

  • Boot to Linux from USB, hoping it was some OS level driver thing. Similar result.

  • Disable SATA AHCI in BIOS. I don't know why this would have an effect but I was grasping at straws. Similar result.

  • Samsung Magician to secure erase drive via USB enclosure. Secure erase not supported over USB, as expected.

  • I already have the latest BIOS. Lenovo has an old BIOS extension for secure erasing SSDs but it does not support the T520, it only supports older machines.


The reboot on reinsert does not occur when I hotplug a Crucial M4. It only occurs with the Samsung 840 EVO. These are the only two drives I have, so I don't know which one is the exception.



My questions:




  1. Why does the machine reboot when I plug in the Samsung and how can I stop this from happening?

  2. If I can't, is there a less ridiculous way to unfreeze an SSD?

  3. If not, is there some way to secure erase an SSD over USB?

  4. If not, how do I secure erase this drive short of purchasing a new computer?










share|improve this question

























  • Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

    – Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:15











  • @techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:18











  • Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:25













  • @Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:36
















4












4








4


3






I have a ThinkPad T520 and a Samsung 840 EVO 256GB SSD that I'm trying to secure erase.



I cannot secure erase the drive because I cannot unfreeze the drive because I cannot remove then reinsert the drive without the computer rebooting itself (and re-freezing the drive).



I'm sure the concept of "freezing" SSDs and requiring a power cycle to unfreeze makes sense to the autistic basement-monkeys that thought that one up, but I need to find a way to actually perform this task.



Things I've tried so far:




  • Samsung Magician secure erase USB boot disk. Reboot machine, drive is frozen, program instructs disconnect + reconnect drive without powering off machine. I remove drive from internal bay. I reinsert. Machine reboots on reinsert. Drive is re-frozen.

  • Boot to Linux from USB, hoping it was some OS level driver thing. Similar result.

  • Disable SATA AHCI in BIOS. I don't know why this would have an effect but I was grasping at straws. Similar result.

  • Samsung Magician to secure erase drive via USB enclosure. Secure erase not supported over USB, as expected.

  • I already have the latest BIOS. Lenovo has an old BIOS extension for secure erasing SSDs but it does not support the T520, it only supports older machines.


The reboot on reinsert does not occur when I hotplug a Crucial M4. It only occurs with the Samsung 840 EVO. These are the only two drives I have, so I don't know which one is the exception.



My questions:




  1. Why does the machine reboot when I plug in the Samsung and how can I stop this from happening?

  2. If I can't, is there a less ridiculous way to unfreeze an SSD?

  3. If not, is there some way to secure erase an SSD over USB?

  4. If not, how do I secure erase this drive short of purchasing a new computer?










share|improve this question
















I have a ThinkPad T520 and a Samsung 840 EVO 256GB SSD that I'm trying to secure erase.



I cannot secure erase the drive because I cannot unfreeze the drive because I cannot remove then reinsert the drive without the computer rebooting itself (and re-freezing the drive).



I'm sure the concept of "freezing" SSDs and requiring a power cycle to unfreeze makes sense to the autistic basement-monkeys that thought that one up, but I need to find a way to actually perform this task.



Things I've tried so far:




  • Samsung Magician secure erase USB boot disk. Reboot machine, drive is frozen, program instructs disconnect + reconnect drive without powering off machine. I remove drive from internal bay. I reinsert. Machine reboots on reinsert. Drive is re-frozen.

  • Boot to Linux from USB, hoping it was some OS level driver thing. Similar result.

  • Disable SATA AHCI in BIOS. I don't know why this would have an effect but I was grasping at straws. Similar result.

  • Samsung Magician to secure erase drive via USB enclosure. Secure erase not supported over USB, as expected.

  • I already have the latest BIOS. Lenovo has an old BIOS extension for secure erasing SSDs but it does not support the T520, it only supports older machines.


The reboot on reinsert does not occur when I hotplug a Crucial M4. It only occurs with the Samsung 840 EVO. These are the only two drives I have, so I don't know which one is the exception.



My questions:




  1. Why does the machine reboot when I plug in the Samsung and how can I stop this from happening?

  2. If I can't, is there a less ridiculous way to unfreeze an SSD?

  3. If not, is there some way to secure erase an SSD over USB?

  4. If not, how do I secure erase this drive short of purchasing a new computer?







ssd thinkpad secure-erase






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 21 '16 at 20:30









fixer1234

19.4k145082




19.4k145082










asked Jun 4 '14 at 18:12









Jason CJason C

7,11073141




7,11073141













  • Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

    – Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:15











  • @techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:18











  • Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:25













  • @Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:36





















  • Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

    – Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:15











  • @techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:18











  • Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

    – Ramhound
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:25













  • @Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

    – Jason C
    Jun 4 '14 at 18:36



















Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Jun 4 '14 at 18:15





Can you explain what do you mean by "Frozen"?

– Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007
Jun 4 '14 at 18:15













@techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

– Jason C
Jun 4 '14 at 18:18





@techie007 I mean this in a friendly manner: If you do not know what "frozen" means in this context then you will not be able to answer the question. :) Anyways it is a "security" feature. Start here: google.com/search?q=ssd%20unfreeze

– Jason C
Jun 4 '14 at 18:18













Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

– Ramhound
Jun 4 '14 at 18:25







Does your laptop support hotplug SATA motherboards support this functionality. Sounds like either the laptop or the SSD doesn't support hotplug.

– Ramhound
Jun 4 '14 at 18:25















@Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

– Jason C
Jun 4 '14 at 18:36







@Ramhound I think so, but I cannot find a definitive source for that. The Crucial M4 could be hotplugged into the laptop fine. The DVD-RW drive is hot-swappable and is on the same SATA controller on the motherboard, so evidence suggests it is supported.

– Jason C
Jun 4 '14 at 18:36












3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes


















5














I was able to do this. It turns out Lenovo makes a utility specifically for secure erasing drives that is compatible with the T520 (and many other models). It looks like this utility is the more modern replacement for the BIOS extension that is available for older models.



So if you have a ThinkPad newer than circa 2011, check the "Storage" subsection under the drivers/downloads area for your model ThinkPad at the Lenovo web site.



For me, with the T520, it was the adorably Engrish Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive.




  1. Download the above ISO (check the supported model list to make sure it is for your ThinkPad first; search for your model on their web site if it isn't).

  2. Burn it to a CD or DVD (or ThumbDrive, use UNetbootin or Rufus - although I have not tried this and have run into issues in the past with Lenovo ISO's that use the Nero Bootloader, dunno about this one though.)

  3. Power off laptop, install the drive you want to erase.

  4. Boot laptop with CD/DVD in. If it doesn't boot automatically hammer on F12 when the machine turns on to display the boot menu and choose the CD-ROM drive from there.

  5. Follow the instructions on the screen for erasing the drive and resetting the key. Takes about 5 minutes tops.

  6. Label and save the disc you just burned, it will come in handy if you have to do this again.

  7. You're all done. Power off machine and remove the drive, then tell all your friends the story. They'll love it. Great conversation starter at parties as well.


The Lenovo utility accomplishes the unfreeze by generating some sort of key you have to write down, then rebooting the machine (presumably doing some magic to power cycle the SATA device without re-freezing it) and asking you for the key again.



Confirmed working with Crucial M4 and Samsung 840 EVO.



Note that you may wish to ensure that you have the latest BIOS update for your PC installed (as well as the latest firmware for your SSD drives). BIOS updates can also be found on the Lenovo site in the section for your model laptop.



I cannot explain why I am able to hotplug the M4 but not the 840. It does not really matter now but I'd still be interested to know just for academic reasons.






share|improve this answer
























  • Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

    – ejain
    Feb 17 '17 at 7:40



















3














To create a bootable USB drive that can be used to reset the SSD in a T520 (and many other ThinkPad models), follow these instructions:




  1. Download the "floppy" version of Lenovo's Drive Erase Utility.

  2. Create a bootable "FreeDOS" USB drive, e.g. with Rufus.

  3. Extract the contents of the downloaded zip file to the USB drive.

  4. Create a efiboot subdirectory on the USB drive, and move the BootX64.efi from the root of the drive to that subdirectory.

  5. Restart, boot from the USB drive (boot menu=F12).

  6. Run DrvErase.






share|improve this answer































    1














    With Linux, I created a bootable USB pen drive containing Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive - ThinkPad for my Lenovo T440.



    This is one of multiple steps taken to prepare for full disk encryption.
    Download the .zip file containing the utility. This file is a little under 80KB.
    Prepare USB disk



    Run fdisk to format and prepare the USB disk. Make sure the device path to the USB disk is correct. /dev/sdb is the correct one for me, but may not be the same device on your computer.



    sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to start the utility. Next steps are keypresses.
    <kbd>o</kbd> to create a new DOS disklabel
    <kbd>n</kbd> for new partition
    <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default (primary partition)
    <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default partition number
    <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default first sector
    <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default last sector
    Conditional: If prompted, enter <kbd>Y</kbd> to overwrite existing file system signature
    <kbd>t</kbd> to change partition type
    <kbd>c</kbd> for W95 FAT32 (LBA)
    <kbd>a</kbd> to toggle (enable) bootable flag
    <kbd>w</kbd> to write changes to disk and exit fdisk


    Create a filesystem on the drive. Now, append a 1 to the original device path to select the first and single partition created in the previous step.



    # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdb1


    Mount the partition



    # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt


    Unzip the contents of the utility zip previously downloaded



    # cd /mnt
    # unzip ~/Downloads/83fd04ww.zip


    Create UEFI folder and move the BootX64.efi into that folder



    # mkdir -p /mnt/EFI/BOOT
    # mv /mnt/BootX64.efi /mnt/EFI/BOOT


    Sync pending disk operations, change out of the directory, and unmount the flash drive



    # sync
    # cd /
    # umount /mnt


    Run the utility
    Insert the USB drive into the ThinkPad and hammer F12 (alternatively F1, then F12) after powering on to be able to select "Boot from other device". Select the USB Flash Drive, and the utility should start.
    Disk utility steps




    1. Press 1 for delete

    2. Yes to confirm

    3. Yes to really confirm

    4. Write down the Request Key written on screen

    5. Press ENTER to Restart and let the boot process do its thing without
      interfering

    6. Enter the request key previously written down and ENTER to continue

    7. Enter to confirm destroying of all data

    8. Wait for operation to complete and press any key to restart






    share|improve this answer


























    • I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

      – vega8
      Nov 5 '18 at 19:44












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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    I was able to do this. It turns out Lenovo makes a utility specifically for secure erasing drives that is compatible with the T520 (and many other models). It looks like this utility is the more modern replacement for the BIOS extension that is available for older models.



    So if you have a ThinkPad newer than circa 2011, check the "Storage" subsection under the drivers/downloads area for your model ThinkPad at the Lenovo web site.



    For me, with the T520, it was the adorably Engrish Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive.




    1. Download the above ISO (check the supported model list to make sure it is for your ThinkPad first; search for your model on their web site if it isn't).

    2. Burn it to a CD or DVD (or ThumbDrive, use UNetbootin or Rufus - although I have not tried this and have run into issues in the past with Lenovo ISO's that use the Nero Bootloader, dunno about this one though.)

    3. Power off laptop, install the drive you want to erase.

    4. Boot laptop with CD/DVD in. If it doesn't boot automatically hammer on F12 when the machine turns on to display the boot menu and choose the CD-ROM drive from there.

    5. Follow the instructions on the screen for erasing the drive and resetting the key. Takes about 5 minutes tops.

    6. Label and save the disc you just burned, it will come in handy if you have to do this again.

    7. You're all done. Power off machine and remove the drive, then tell all your friends the story. They'll love it. Great conversation starter at parties as well.


    The Lenovo utility accomplishes the unfreeze by generating some sort of key you have to write down, then rebooting the machine (presumably doing some magic to power cycle the SATA device without re-freezing it) and asking you for the key again.



    Confirmed working with Crucial M4 and Samsung 840 EVO.



    Note that you may wish to ensure that you have the latest BIOS update for your PC installed (as well as the latest firmware for your SSD drives). BIOS updates can also be found on the Lenovo site in the section for your model laptop.



    I cannot explain why I am able to hotplug the M4 but not the 840. It does not really matter now but I'd still be interested to know just for academic reasons.






    share|improve this answer
























    • Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

      – ejain
      Feb 17 '17 at 7:40
















    5














    I was able to do this. It turns out Lenovo makes a utility specifically for secure erasing drives that is compatible with the T520 (and many other models). It looks like this utility is the more modern replacement for the BIOS extension that is available for older models.



    So if you have a ThinkPad newer than circa 2011, check the "Storage" subsection under the drivers/downloads area for your model ThinkPad at the Lenovo web site.



    For me, with the T520, it was the adorably Engrish Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive.




    1. Download the above ISO (check the supported model list to make sure it is for your ThinkPad first; search for your model on their web site if it isn't).

    2. Burn it to a CD or DVD (or ThumbDrive, use UNetbootin or Rufus - although I have not tried this and have run into issues in the past with Lenovo ISO's that use the Nero Bootloader, dunno about this one though.)

    3. Power off laptop, install the drive you want to erase.

    4. Boot laptop with CD/DVD in. If it doesn't boot automatically hammer on F12 when the machine turns on to display the boot menu and choose the CD-ROM drive from there.

    5. Follow the instructions on the screen for erasing the drive and resetting the key. Takes about 5 minutes tops.

    6. Label and save the disc you just burned, it will come in handy if you have to do this again.

    7. You're all done. Power off machine and remove the drive, then tell all your friends the story. They'll love it. Great conversation starter at parties as well.


    The Lenovo utility accomplishes the unfreeze by generating some sort of key you have to write down, then rebooting the machine (presumably doing some magic to power cycle the SATA device without re-freezing it) and asking you for the key again.



    Confirmed working with Crucial M4 and Samsung 840 EVO.



    Note that you may wish to ensure that you have the latest BIOS update for your PC installed (as well as the latest firmware for your SSD drives). BIOS updates can also be found on the Lenovo site in the section for your model laptop.



    I cannot explain why I am able to hotplug the M4 but not the 840. It does not really matter now but I'd still be interested to know just for academic reasons.






    share|improve this answer
























    • Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

      – ejain
      Feb 17 '17 at 7:40














    5












    5








    5







    I was able to do this. It turns out Lenovo makes a utility specifically for secure erasing drives that is compatible with the T520 (and many other models). It looks like this utility is the more modern replacement for the BIOS extension that is available for older models.



    So if you have a ThinkPad newer than circa 2011, check the "Storage" subsection under the drivers/downloads area for your model ThinkPad at the Lenovo web site.



    For me, with the T520, it was the adorably Engrish Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive.




    1. Download the above ISO (check the supported model list to make sure it is for your ThinkPad first; search for your model on their web site if it isn't).

    2. Burn it to a CD or DVD (or ThumbDrive, use UNetbootin or Rufus - although I have not tried this and have run into issues in the past with Lenovo ISO's that use the Nero Bootloader, dunno about this one though.)

    3. Power off laptop, install the drive you want to erase.

    4. Boot laptop with CD/DVD in. If it doesn't boot automatically hammer on F12 when the machine turns on to display the boot menu and choose the CD-ROM drive from there.

    5. Follow the instructions on the screen for erasing the drive and resetting the key. Takes about 5 minutes tops.

    6. Label and save the disc you just burned, it will come in handy if you have to do this again.

    7. You're all done. Power off machine and remove the drive, then tell all your friends the story. They'll love it. Great conversation starter at parties as well.


    The Lenovo utility accomplishes the unfreeze by generating some sort of key you have to write down, then rebooting the machine (presumably doing some magic to power cycle the SATA device without re-freezing it) and asking you for the key again.



    Confirmed working with Crucial M4 and Samsung 840 EVO.



    Note that you may wish to ensure that you have the latest BIOS update for your PC installed (as well as the latest firmware for your SSD drives). BIOS updates can also be found on the Lenovo site in the section for your model laptop.



    I cannot explain why I am able to hotplug the M4 but not the 840. It does not really matter now but I'd still be interested to know just for academic reasons.






    share|improve this answer













    I was able to do this. It turns out Lenovo makes a utility specifically for secure erasing drives that is compatible with the T520 (and many other models). It looks like this utility is the more modern replacement for the BIOS extension that is available for older models.



    So if you have a ThinkPad newer than circa 2011, check the "Storage" subsection under the drivers/downloads area for your model ThinkPad at the Lenovo web site.



    For me, with the T520, it was the adorably Engrish Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive.




    1. Download the above ISO (check the supported model list to make sure it is for your ThinkPad first; search for your model on their web site if it isn't).

    2. Burn it to a CD or DVD (or ThumbDrive, use UNetbootin or Rufus - although I have not tried this and have run into issues in the past with Lenovo ISO's that use the Nero Bootloader, dunno about this one though.)

    3. Power off laptop, install the drive you want to erase.

    4. Boot laptop with CD/DVD in. If it doesn't boot automatically hammer on F12 when the machine turns on to display the boot menu and choose the CD-ROM drive from there.

    5. Follow the instructions on the screen for erasing the drive and resetting the key. Takes about 5 minutes tops.

    6. Label and save the disc you just burned, it will come in handy if you have to do this again.

    7. You're all done. Power off machine and remove the drive, then tell all your friends the story. They'll love it. Great conversation starter at parties as well.


    The Lenovo utility accomplishes the unfreeze by generating some sort of key you have to write down, then rebooting the machine (presumably doing some magic to power cycle the SATA device without re-freezing it) and asking you for the key again.



    Confirmed working with Crucial M4 and Samsung 840 EVO.



    Note that you may wish to ensure that you have the latest BIOS update for your PC installed (as well as the latest firmware for your SSD drives). BIOS updates can also be found on the Lenovo site in the section for your model laptop.



    I cannot explain why I am able to hotplug the M4 but not the 840. It does not really matter now but I'd still be interested to know just for academic reasons.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jun 4 '14 at 22:59









    Jason CJason C

    7,11073141




    7,11073141













    • Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

      – ejain
      Feb 17 '17 at 7:40



















    • Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

      – ejain
      Feb 17 '17 at 7:40

















    Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

    – ejain
    Feb 17 '17 at 7:40





    Looks like neither UNetbootin (625) nor Rufus (2.12) can handle this ISO...

    – ejain
    Feb 17 '17 at 7:40













    3














    To create a bootable USB drive that can be used to reset the SSD in a T520 (and many other ThinkPad models), follow these instructions:




    1. Download the "floppy" version of Lenovo's Drive Erase Utility.

    2. Create a bootable "FreeDOS" USB drive, e.g. with Rufus.

    3. Extract the contents of the downloaded zip file to the USB drive.

    4. Create a efiboot subdirectory on the USB drive, and move the BootX64.efi from the root of the drive to that subdirectory.

    5. Restart, boot from the USB drive (boot menu=F12).

    6. Run DrvErase.






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      To create a bootable USB drive that can be used to reset the SSD in a T520 (and many other ThinkPad models), follow these instructions:




      1. Download the "floppy" version of Lenovo's Drive Erase Utility.

      2. Create a bootable "FreeDOS" USB drive, e.g. with Rufus.

      3. Extract the contents of the downloaded zip file to the USB drive.

      4. Create a efiboot subdirectory on the USB drive, and move the BootX64.efi from the root of the drive to that subdirectory.

      5. Restart, boot from the USB drive (boot menu=F12).

      6. Run DrvErase.






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3







        To create a bootable USB drive that can be used to reset the SSD in a T520 (and many other ThinkPad models), follow these instructions:




        1. Download the "floppy" version of Lenovo's Drive Erase Utility.

        2. Create a bootable "FreeDOS" USB drive, e.g. with Rufus.

        3. Extract the contents of the downloaded zip file to the USB drive.

        4. Create a efiboot subdirectory on the USB drive, and move the BootX64.efi from the root of the drive to that subdirectory.

        5. Restart, boot from the USB drive (boot menu=F12).

        6. Run DrvErase.






        share|improve this answer













        To create a bootable USB drive that can be used to reset the SSD in a T520 (and many other ThinkPad models), follow these instructions:




        1. Download the "floppy" version of Lenovo's Drive Erase Utility.

        2. Create a bootable "FreeDOS" USB drive, e.g. with Rufus.

        3. Extract the contents of the downloaded zip file to the USB drive.

        4. Create a efiboot subdirectory on the USB drive, and move the BootX64.efi from the root of the drive to that subdirectory.

        5. Restart, boot from the USB drive (boot menu=F12).

        6. Run DrvErase.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Feb 20 '17 at 1:12









        ejainejain

        1313




        1313























            1














            With Linux, I created a bootable USB pen drive containing Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive - ThinkPad for my Lenovo T440.



            This is one of multiple steps taken to prepare for full disk encryption.
            Download the .zip file containing the utility. This file is a little under 80KB.
            Prepare USB disk



            Run fdisk to format and prepare the USB disk. Make sure the device path to the USB disk is correct. /dev/sdb is the correct one for me, but may not be the same device on your computer.



            sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to start the utility. Next steps are keypresses.
            <kbd>o</kbd> to create a new DOS disklabel
            <kbd>n</kbd> for new partition
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default (primary partition)
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default partition number
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default first sector
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default last sector
            Conditional: If prompted, enter <kbd>Y</kbd> to overwrite existing file system signature
            <kbd>t</kbd> to change partition type
            <kbd>c</kbd> for W95 FAT32 (LBA)
            <kbd>a</kbd> to toggle (enable) bootable flag
            <kbd>w</kbd> to write changes to disk and exit fdisk


            Create a filesystem on the drive. Now, append a 1 to the original device path to select the first and single partition created in the previous step.



            # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdb1


            Mount the partition



            # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt


            Unzip the contents of the utility zip previously downloaded



            # cd /mnt
            # unzip ~/Downloads/83fd04ww.zip


            Create UEFI folder and move the BootX64.efi into that folder



            # mkdir -p /mnt/EFI/BOOT
            # mv /mnt/BootX64.efi /mnt/EFI/BOOT


            Sync pending disk operations, change out of the directory, and unmount the flash drive



            # sync
            # cd /
            # umount /mnt


            Run the utility
            Insert the USB drive into the ThinkPad and hammer F12 (alternatively F1, then F12) after powering on to be able to select "Boot from other device". Select the USB Flash Drive, and the utility should start.
            Disk utility steps




            1. Press 1 for delete

            2. Yes to confirm

            3. Yes to really confirm

            4. Write down the Request Key written on screen

            5. Press ENTER to Restart and let the boot process do its thing without
              interfering

            6. Enter the request key previously written down and ENTER to continue

            7. Enter to confirm destroying of all data

            8. Wait for operation to complete and press any key to restart






            share|improve this answer


























            • I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

              – vega8
              Nov 5 '18 at 19:44
















            1














            With Linux, I created a bootable USB pen drive containing Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive - ThinkPad for my Lenovo T440.



            This is one of multiple steps taken to prepare for full disk encryption.
            Download the .zip file containing the utility. This file is a little under 80KB.
            Prepare USB disk



            Run fdisk to format and prepare the USB disk. Make sure the device path to the USB disk is correct. /dev/sdb is the correct one for me, but may not be the same device on your computer.



            sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to start the utility. Next steps are keypresses.
            <kbd>o</kbd> to create a new DOS disklabel
            <kbd>n</kbd> for new partition
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default (primary partition)
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default partition number
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default first sector
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default last sector
            Conditional: If prompted, enter <kbd>Y</kbd> to overwrite existing file system signature
            <kbd>t</kbd> to change partition type
            <kbd>c</kbd> for W95 FAT32 (LBA)
            <kbd>a</kbd> to toggle (enable) bootable flag
            <kbd>w</kbd> to write changes to disk and exit fdisk


            Create a filesystem on the drive. Now, append a 1 to the original device path to select the first and single partition created in the previous step.



            # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdb1


            Mount the partition



            # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt


            Unzip the contents of the utility zip previously downloaded



            # cd /mnt
            # unzip ~/Downloads/83fd04ww.zip


            Create UEFI folder and move the BootX64.efi into that folder



            # mkdir -p /mnt/EFI/BOOT
            # mv /mnt/BootX64.efi /mnt/EFI/BOOT


            Sync pending disk operations, change out of the directory, and unmount the flash drive



            # sync
            # cd /
            # umount /mnt


            Run the utility
            Insert the USB drive into the ThinkPad and hammer F12 (alternatively F1, then F12) after powering on to be able to select "Boot from other device". Select the USB Flash Drive, and the utility should start.
            Disk utility steps




            1. Press 1 for delete

            2. Yes to confirm

            3. Yes to really confirm

            4. Write down the Request Key written on screen

            5. Press ENTER to Restart and let the boot process do its thing without
              interfering

            6. Enter the request key previously written down and ENTER to continue

            7. Enter to confirm destroying of all data

            8. Wait for operation to complete and press any key to restart






            share|improve this answer


























            • I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

              – vega8
              Nov 5 '18 at 19:44














            1












            1








            1







            With Linux, I created a bootable USB pen drive containing Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive - ThinkPad for my Lenovo T440.



            This is one of multiple steps taken to prepare for full disk encryption.
            Download the .zip file containing the utility. This file is a little under 80KB.
            Prepare USB disk



            Run fdisk to format and prepare the USB disk. Make sure the device path to the USB disk is correct. /dev/sdb is the correct one for me, but may not be the same device on your computer.



            sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to start the utility. Next steps are keypresses.
            <kbd>o</kbd> to create a new DOS disklabel
            <kbd>n</kbd> for new partition
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default (primary partition)
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default partition number
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default first sector
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default last sector
            Conditional: If prompted, enter <kbd>Y</kbd> to overwrite existing file system signature
            <kbd>t</kbd> to change partition type
            <kbd>c</kbd> for W95 FAT32 (LBA)
            <kbd>a</kbd> to toggle (enable) bootable flag
            <kbd>w</kbd> to write changes to disk and exit fdisk


            Create a filesystem on the drive. Now, append a 1 to the original device path to select the first and single partition created in the previous step.



            # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdb1


            Mount the partition



            # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt


            Unzip the contents of the utility zip previously downloaded



            # cd /mnt
            # unzip ~/Downloads/83fd04ww.zip


            Create UEFI folder and move the BootX64.efi into that folder



            # mkdir -p /mnt/EFI/BOOT
            # mv /mnt/BootX64.efi /mnt/EFI/BOOT


            Sync pending disk operations, change out of the directory, and unmount the flash drive



            # sync
            # cd /
            # umount /mnt


            Run the utility
            Insert the USB drive into the ThinkPad and hammer F12 (alternatively F1, then F12) after powering on to be able to select "Boot from other device". Select the USB Flash Drive, and the utility should start.
            Disk utility steps




            1. Press 1 for delete

            2. Yes to confirm

            3. Yes to really confirm

            4. Write down the Request Key written on screen

            5. Press ENTER to Restart and let the boot process do its thing without
              interfering

            6. Enter the request key previously written down and ENTER to continue

            7. Enter to confirm destroying of all data

            8. Wait for operation to complete and press any key to restart






            share|improve this answer















            With Linux, I created a bootable USB pen drive containing Drive Erase Utility for the Resetting the Cryptographic Key and the Erasing the Solid State Drive - ThinkPad for my Lenovo T440.



            This is one of multiple steps taken to prepare for full disk encryption.
            Download the .zip file containing the utility. This file is a little under 80KB.
            Prepare USB disk



            Run fdisk to format and prepare the USB disk. Make sure the device path to the USB disk is correct. /dev/sdb is the correct one for me, but may not be the same device on your computer.



            sudo fdisk /dev/sdb to start the utility. Next steps are keypresses.
            <kbd>o</kbd> to create a new DOS disklabel
            <kbd>n</kbd> for new partition
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default (primary partition)
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default partition number
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default first sector
            <kbd>Enter</kbd> for default last sector
            Conditional: If prompted, enter <kbd>Y</kbd> to overwrite existing file system signature
            <kbd>t</kbd> to change partition type
            <kbd>c</kbd> for W95 FAT32 (LBA)
            <kbd>a</kbd> to toggle (enable) bootable flag
            <kbd>w</kbd> to write changes to disk and exit fdisk


            Create a filesystem on the drive. Now, append a 1 to the original device path to select the first and single partition created in the previous step.



            # mkfs.vfat -F 32 /dev/sdb1


            Mount the partition



            # mount /dev/sdb1 /mnt


            Unzip the contents of the utility zip previously downloaded



            # cd /mnt
            # unzip ~/Downloads/83fd04ww.zip


            Create UEFI folder and move the BootX64.efi into that folder



            # mkdir -p /mnt/EFI/BOOT
            # mv /mnt/BootX64.efi /mnt/EFI/BOOT


            Sync pending disk operations, change out of the directory, and unmount the flash drive



            # sync
            # cd /
            # umount /mnt


            Run the utility
            Insert the USB drive into the ThinkPad and hammer F12 (alternatively F1, then F12) after powering on to be able to select "Boot from other device". Select the USB Flash Drive, and the utility should start.
            Disk utility steps




            1. Press 1 for delete

            2. Yes to confirm

            3. Yes to really confirm

            4. Write down the Request Key written on screen

            5. Press ENTER to Restart and let the boot process do its thing without
              interfering

            6. Enter the request key previously written down and ENTER to continue

            7. Enter to confirm destroying of all data

            8. Wait for operation to complete and press any key to restart







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited 2 days ago









            Benedikt Köppel

            514411




            514411










            answered Jan 10 '18 at 8:09









            LukeLuke

            112




            112













            • I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

              – vega8
              Nov 5 '18 at 19:44



















            • I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

              – vega8
              Nov 5 '18 at 19:44

















            I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

            – vega8
            Nov 5 '18 at 19:44





            I was totally lost trying to use nvme format or writing the .iso to a USB drive. The above solution however worked perfectly for me on a Samsung MZVLB512 . Thanks

            – vega8
            Nov 5 '18 at 19:44


















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