May 10th, 2022, 0:16
May 10th, 2022, 0:45
terminator2 wrote:I have got a case where a computer dealer accidently deleted C: Drive to reinstall OS. But for no reason D drive also got deleted.
He stopped further process and tried his own to recover data but nothing was recovered,
I suspect C: Drive was shrinked to create small volume . I think since it is a virtual volume valid till windows session no partition table entry is made .
I have also tried all available softwares but I am not getting required boot sector of D drive.
I just want to know whether recovery is possible or not in such cases.
May 10th, 2022, 3:23
Amarbir[CDR-Labs] wrote:terminator2 wrote:I have got a case where a computer dealer accidently deleted C: Drive to reinstall OS. But for no reason D drive also got deleted.
He stopped further process and tried his own to recover data but nothing was recovered,
I suspect C: Drive was shrinked to create small volume . I think since it is a virtual volume valid till windows session no partition table entry is made .
I have also tried all available softwares but I am not getting required boot sector of D drive.
I just want to know whether recovery is possible or not in such cases.
Well,
Do check if drive is SMR type ,Whats the Drive Model And Brand
May 10th, 2022, 4:10
May 10th, 2022, 6:35
May 10th, 2022, 6:38
terminator2 wrote:Amarbir[CDR-Labs] wrote:terminator2 wrote:I have got a case where a computer dealer accidently deleted C: Drive to reinstall OS. But for no reason D drive also got deleted.
He stopped further process and tried his own to recover data but nothing was recovered,
I suspect C: Drive was shrinked to create small volume . I think since it is a virtual volume valid till windows session no partition table entry is made .
I have also tried all available softwares but I am not getting required boot sector of D drive.
I just want to know whether recovery is possible or not in such cases.
Well,
Do check if drive is SMR type ,Whats the Drive Model And Brand
Hi Amarbit Thanks for replying. Yes you are right. This particular Toshiba hard disk is SMR
Toshiba Internal laptop Model - MQ01ABD100 Drive Rev. AAD AD00/AX0A1D Date -- 17 APRIL 2018
But I was not aware merely formatting or deleting partition will cause unrecoverable data loss. If this is so then I must educate all my customers for the same.
Thanks again
May 10th, 2022, 13:53
terminator2 wrote:This particular Toshiba hard disk is SMR
But I was not aware merely formatting or deleting partition will cause unrecoverable data loss.
May 10th, 2022, 15:08
fzabkar wrote:terminator2 wrote:This particular Toshiba hard disk is SMR
But I was not aware merely formatting or deleting partition will cause unrecoverable data loss.
I understand that the drive is not an SMR model, but even if it were, merely deleting or creating a partition doesn't always invoke TRIM. It's formatting the partition that invokes TRIM.
I would use a tool such as DMDE to scroll through the LBAs to see whether the drive has been zero filled.
May 13th, 2022, 1:17
fzabkar wrote:terminator2 wrote:This particular Toshiba hard disk is SMR
But I was not aware merely formatting or deleting partition will cause unrecoverable data loss.
I understand that the drive is not an SMR model, but even if it were, merely deleting or creating a partition doesn't always invoke TRIM. It's formatting the partition that invokes TRIM.
I would use a tool such as DMDE to scroll through the LBAs to see whether the drive has been zero filled.
May 13th, 2022, 1:19
Amarbir[CDR-Labs] wrote:fzabkar wrote:terminator2 wrote:This particular Toshiba hard disk is SMR
But I was not aware merely formatting or deleting partition will cause unrecoverable data loss.
I understand that the drive is not an SMR model, but even if it were, merely deleting or creating a partition doesn't always invoke TRIM. It's formatting the partition that invokes TRIM.
I would use a tool such as DMDE to scroll through the LBAs to see whether the drive has been zero filled.
Well,
How about a Free copy of UFS And Check Hex Of The Entire Platter Surface
May 13th, 2022, 7:29
May 14th, 2022, 23:00
Arch Stanton wrote:Either I do not understand exact situation or I do not understand the failure to recover data. Please describe initial state and the one we have now.
With or without a boot sector you still should be able to recover data. Whether you can 'undelete' previous d: drive is a different matter. If for example d: was NTFS, find start of MFT or even portions of MFT and you can make educated guesses about the position of the file system, test our guesses and adjust as needed. Use it to construct virtual file system and recover data. Same if we have file allocation table or parts of it. And even if we could not, RAW recovery is still an option.
What file system was the d: drive?
May 15th, 2022, 10:22
May 15th, 2022, 23:19
Arch Stanton wrote:I do not understand scenario entirely. When he says he created new partitions, did he also format them? If he used disk management he might very well have. If there was a c and d drive, why do we see more partitions thatn those 2, why did drive letter assignments change?
Did he create partitions in exact same locations? What file systems did we have before the chain of accidents?
With all these unknowns, first thing 'd be doing is run full scan on entire disk using DMDE, I'd rather work with that than with too vague stories. Then see from results if I can figure out location of the old partitions. Easiest is, if DMDE detects file systems is top open those (open volume) and check if directories are the ones that can be expected.
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