raven4d wrote:
the upper command should image the whole drive
That's not
necessarily true. The result depends on many factors, and since you are new to using ddrescue, then we cannot know whether even the basics are correct.
I'm not going to try to teach you how to use ddrescue remotely, but here are some questions/comments for you to think about:
a) What did ddrescue show on the screen at the end of your attempted cloning?
b) Did the cloning take a sensible amount of time for the drive capacity?
c) Compare clone source & target using a hex editor to see whether the clone started.
d) Always use a logfile when using ddrescue - it provides info for later review about which parts of the drive were readable & which were unreadable, as well as allowing cloning to be stopped & restarted, without repeating already successfully cloned parts.
e) That ddrescue command line that you used may not be optimal for many different reasons. In my experience, it is common to need to use some different variations of ddrescue command options, to improve the success rate. In addition, I always use the verbose option.
f) Check the OS messages (e.g. output of dmesg on Linux) to look for any error messages at the time you were cloning.
raven4d wrote:
but when trying r-studio , it just shows nothig .
It's too unclear/ambiguous what you mean exactly - not enough detail.