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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Set internal hard drives unaccessible to imager Post 302591766 by Corona688 on Friday 20th of January 2012 01:57:15 PM
Old 01-20-2012
Hmmm. Does the liveusb use udev? You could configure udev to prevent it from creating certain kinds of device nodes. Without those, clonezilla would be unable to use the disk.

For example there's a default rule on my system for USB devices:

Code:
KERNEL=="sd*[!0-9]|sr*", ENV{ID_SERIAL}!="?*", SUBSYSTEMS=="usb", IMPORT{program}="usb_id --export %p"

You could flip that a bit:
Code:
KERNEL=="sd*[!0-9]|sr*", SUBSYSTEMS!="usb", NAME="skipme/%k"

Make sure that rule runs really early, naming the new rule file lower than everything else. 00-customrules perhaps.

I think that would create any non-USB disk or CDROM devices inside /dev/skipme/sd... and cause it to not create the ordinary /dev/sd... device nodes. If clonezilla uses them to detect disks, it won't find non-USB devices.

Last edited by Corona688; 01-20-2012 at 03:02 PM..
 

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usb-devices(8)							Linux USB Utilities						    usb-devices(8)

NAME
usb-devices - print USB device details SYNOPSIS
usb-devices DESCRIPTION
usb-devices is a (bash) shell script that can be used to display details of USB buses in the system and the devices connected to them. The output of the script is similar to the usb/devices file available either under /proc/bus (if usbfs is mounted), or under /sys/ker- nel/debug (if debugfs is mounted there). The script is primairily intended to be used if the file is not available. In contrast to the usb/devices file, this script only lists active interfaces (those marked with a "*" in the usb/devices file) and their endpoints. Be advised that there can be differences in the way information is sorted, as well as in the format of the output. RETURN VALUE
If sysfs is not mounted, a non-zero exit code is returned. FILES
/sys/bus/usb/devices/usb* The part of the sysfs tree the script walks through to assemble the printed information. /proc/bus/usb/devices Location where the usb/devices file can normally be found for Linux kernels before 2.6.31, if usbfs is mounted. /sys/kernel/debug/usb/devices Location where the usb/devices file can normally be found for Linux kernel 2.6.31 and later, if debugfs is mounted. SEE ALSO
lsusb(8), usbview(8). AUTHORS
Greg Kroah-Hartman <greg@kroah.com> Randy Dunlap <rdunlap@xenotime.net> Frans Pop <elendil@planet.nl> usbutils-0.84 23 June 2009 usb-devices(8)
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