On Wed, Jun 4, 2008 at 11:34 AM, Kevin Faulkner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> 1. unplug any usb storage 2. rmmod ehci_hcd
>> 3. add a line in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist
>> blacklist ehci_hcd
>
> Wouldn't that prevent him from using USB as a whole?
Yes, it would. 'blacklist usb-storage' is a better
whoami i wrote:
HI,
This is my first mail to this mailing list.I want to block external
usb storage completly on my server running on centos 5 having
confidiential data.
shouldn't this server be in a secure area where noone unauthorized can
access its USB ports in the first place?
___
Kevin Faulkner wrote:
> Fajar Priyanto wrote:
> > On Friday 23 May 2008 14:16:45 whoami i wrote:
> >> This is my first mail to this mailing list.I want to block external usb
> >> storage completly on my server running on centos 5 having confidiential
> >> data.
> >
> > 1. unplug any usb storag
Fajar Priyanto wrote:
On Friday 23 May 2008 14:16:45 whoami i wrote:
This is my first mail to this mailing list.I want to block external usb
storage completly on my server running on centos 5 having confidiential
data.
1. unplug any usb storage
2. rmmod ehci_hcd
3. add a line in /etc/modp
On Friday 23 May 2008 14:16:45 whoami i wrote:
> This is my first mail to this mailing list.I want to block external usb
> storage completly on my server running on centos 5 having confidiential
> data.
1. unplug any usb storage
2. rmmod ehci_hcd
3. add a line in /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist
blac
whoami i wrote:
HI,
This is my first mail to this mailing list.I want to block external
usb storage completly on my server running on centos 5 having
confidiential data.
For that i used udev and blocked the external usb storage by creating
the udev rule mentioning any usb storage will
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