majbach wrote:Hi, everyone. Hopefully someone can help me out here or point me in the right direction.
I'll attempt to point you in the right direction, but I don't have time to write beginner's step-by-step instructions. As an overview, one possible approach would be:
a)
Stop making any further changes to your original disk. IMHO you've made too many such changes already. With respect, I'm not sure you should be trying further recovery without assistance from someone who has that disk in front of them. Remember that DIY recovery attempts have several different risks, including some that you've already taken (e.g. altering the original disk, which now cannot be undone, if any of them caused further damage to the filesystem(s) etc.). Some of the steps below also carry risks. If your data is important, and if you are unsure of your own skills / experience etc., you need to consider whether you want to take the risk of potentially making things worse, or instead to employ the services of a reputable DR company.
b) Due to the error messages you're getting from the recovery software, your OS may still be compromised by the malware. IMHO you can't boot from that OS and be sure of normal behavour of that recovery software, especially since your OS is not behaving normally either, as you describe.
c) Therefore using another PC (or a live bootable CD/DVD/USB OS), make a full, raw clone of that original disk onto another (blank) disk and verify that the clone copy is readable. For safety, you might make more than one clone. You must get the direction (source vs. target) of the clone correct, otherwise you erase your original data!
d) Then using recovery software on a PC which is
not compromised by malware, you can see if the partition recovery software works as expected. If anything unexpected happens, the clone taken before that recovery attempt, could be used to restore things back to the previous state ready for further attempts. A DR professional might also decide to further investigate exactly how the partition table or filesystem(s) have been changed by the malware.
e) Other techniques could also be tried, perhaps needing another empty disk and using other recovery software (e.g. GetDataBack etc. etc.) to copy the files that you want onto a new disk.
f) Depending on exactly what has been done to that original disk's partition table and/or filesystem(s) by the malware, and whether the errors you report are due to the OS still being compromised, you may have no alternative but to recover files to a different disk, reinstall your OS from scratch (or recovery DVDs or whatever), and then copy back the recovered files onto the original disk with its re-installed OS.
As I said before, you need to decide whether you want to continue DIY, based on the value of your data and your skills / experience / available equipment & PCs / available time etc. As with any free internet advice, use of the above suggestions is at your own risk, because I don't know your skills / experience etc., I can't stop you making errors as I can't see what keys you press, and it's always possible that I've misunderstood what you're saying. Good luck with whatever you decide to do