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authorB. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>2022-03-14 12:53:16 -0400
committerB. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>2022-03-17 12:38:12 -0400
commitcb375e0a102b321b8b90469a22388bc22196ce63 (patch)
treec2ec68f6114e93735fe10e69f8b57683dac4b1c4 /system/srm
parent97cb813d03cf701b0418aa6e0a4e226362464bd3 (diff)
downloadslackbuilds-cb375e0a102b321b8b90469a22388bc22196ce63.tar.gz
system/srm: Wrap README at 72 columns.
Signed-off-by: B. Watson <yalhcru@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'system/srm')
-rw-r--r--system/srm/README28
1 files changed, 15 insertions, 13 deletions
diff --git a/system/srm/README b/system/srm/README
index a2c86552ed..906440e880 100644
--- a/system/srm/README
+++ b/system/srm/README
@@ -1,15 +1,17 @@
-srm is a secure replacement for rm(1). Unlike the standard rm, it overwrites
-the data in the target files before unlinking them. This prevents command-line
-recovery of the data by examining the raw block device. It may also help to
-frustrate a physical examination of the disk, although it's unlikely that it can
-completely protect against this type of recovery.
+srm is a secure replacement for rm(1). Unlike the standard rm, it
+overwrites the data in the target files before unlinking them. This
+prevents command-line recovery of the data by examining the raw block
+device. It may also help to frustrate a physical examination of the
+disk, although it's unlikely that it can completely protect against
+this type of recovery.
-srm uses algorithms found in "Secure Deletion of Data from Magnetic and Solid-
-State Memory" by Peter Gutmann and THC Secure Delete (the overwrite, truncate,
-rename, unlink sequence).
+srm uses algorithms found in "Secure Deletion of Data from Magnetic
+and Solid- State Memory" by Peter Gutmann and THC Secure Delete (the
+overwrite, truncate, rename, unlink sequence).
-Please note that srm will only work on file systems that overwrite blocks in
-place. In particular, it will *NOT* work on reiserfs or the vast majority of
-journaled file systems. It should work on ext2, FAT-based file systems, and
-the BSD native file system. On ext3, srm will try to disable the journaling
-of data (please see the verbose output if this fails).
+Please note that srm will only work on file systems that overwrite
+blocks in place. In particular, it will *NOT* work on reiserfs or
+the vast majority of journaled file systems. It should work on ext2,
+FAT-based file systems, and the BSD native file system. On ext3, srm
+will try to disable the journaling of data (please see the verbose
+output if this fails).