Hi all, while staring at the block layer code I found what I think is a major security issue with the use of REQ_OP_SECURE_ERASE. The issue is not about the actual protocol implementation, which only exists for eMMC [1], but about we handle issuing the operation in the block layer. That is done through __blkdev_issue_discard, which takes various parameters into account to align the issue discard request to what the hardware prefers. Which is perfectly fine for discard as an advisory operation, but deadly for an operation that wants to make data inaccessible. The problem has existed ever since secure erase support was added to the kernel with commit 8d57a98ccd0b ("block: add secure discard"), which added secure erase support as a REQ_SECURE flag to the discard operation. The ioctl added there also as the only users for a long time, until f2fs added a second (really strange) user that uses secure erase if offered by the device but otherwise plain old discard: 9af846486d78 ("f2fs: add F2FS_IOC_SEC_TRIM_FILE ioctl") which seems to treat the secure discard as nice to have but actually is fine with data leaks from the use of discard or an incorrect implementation of secure erase. My preference would be to just remove this ill designed feature entirely. The alternative 1 in this thead does just that. Alternative 2 tries to fix it instead, but I haven't bee nable to get any interested party to actually test in more than three eeks, suggesting we're better off removing the code. [1] which is rather dubious as well, as sector based secure erase in flash based media can't really work due to the lack of in-place write support. At best it is the equivalent for a Write Same or Write Zeroes command without deterministic data on the next read.