Data recovery and disk repair questions and discussions related to old-fashioned SATA, SAS, SCSI, IDE, MFM hard drives - any type of storage device that has moving parts
January 19th, 2013, 15:19
hello all .
i have used ddrescue to image wd5000aaks-22v1a0 that has some bad sectors .
the first 10 gigas were imaged succesfully then i had to jump over 2 giga to start from the 12th giga untill the end .
the thing is when mounting the image using OSFMount and doing a scan using r-studio , tons of files appear but in raw recovery , all files sorted by their extention .
imaging the first sectors of the original drive should have gathered the MBR and MFTs right ? so files should appear in their original folders , not like an ordinary raw recovery .
January 19th, 2013, 15:26
the drive/data has no value and for testing purposes only
January 21st, 2013, 9:34
When you skipped ahead, did you skip ahead on both the source and destination drive?
ddrescue -i 12G -o 12G [source] [destination] [log]
January 21st, 2013, 11:40
lcoughey wrote:When you skipped ahead, did you skip ahead on both the source and destination drive?
ddrescue -i 12G -o 12G [source] [destination] [log]
thank you for that notice .
i am using the following
ddrescue -n -f -i 12G /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 log
shouldn't the output file automatically follow the input one ?
not using the -o flag should have done the problem ?
January 21st, 2013, 11:53
raven4d wrote:lcoughey wrote:When you skipped ahead, did you skip ahead on both the source and destination drive?
ddrescue -i 12G -o 12G [source] [destination] [log]
thank you for that notice .
i am using the following
ddrescue -n -f -i 12G /dev/sda1 /dev/sdb1 log
shouldn't the output file automatically follow the input one ?
not using the -o flag should have done the problem ?
It should work, in theory, but I never take the risk. After thinking about it for a bit, it would be helpful to know the file system that is on the drive. The missing 2GB could very well be enough to cause file system corruption.
January 21st, 2013, 12:00
sorry , i've skipped that , it's ntfs formatted drive
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