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limp1058
September 21st, 2001, 11:35 PM
If I parttitioned my Hard Drive.......How long after would I be able to get back information that I had on that partition? I have one partition now and did before....What program could I use to recover Partition Information? Or is it even possible?
Negative
September 22nd, 2001, 12:26 AM
http://www.ontrack.com/easyrecovery/ Only 179$, Limp!
jparker[]
September 22nd, 2001, 03:53 AM
From what I understand about most file systems, as soo as the fiel table is lost, or overwritten, you can't get the data back.
So, if you "Accidentally" partition your drive, then the best thing to do is unparition right then.
limp1058
September 22nd, 2001, 04:00 AM
Hmm $179? Well Right now all I got's is like $50 It's not worth it.....
RogueSpy
September 22nd, 2001, 04:45 AM
I'll give you the rest of the money Limp. . . NOT!!!! :killcompu
Giovanni
September 29th, 2001, 09:40 PM
Originally posted by limp1058
Hmm $179? Well Right now all I got's is like $50 It's not worth it.....
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Tramp.
Terr
October 1st, 2001, 02:13 AM
Originally posted by jparker
From what I understand about most file systems, as soo as the fiel table is lost, or overwritten, you can't get the data back.
So, if you "Accidentally" partition your drive, then the best thing to do is unparition right then.
Well, the DATA would still be there on your drive, but you wouldn't be able to tell where one file stopped, another started, or what segments were leftover from partially-overwritten files...
It would be a real pain in the ass to try to get anything back from a disk that lost it's file tables, but if it was straight ASCII or something, and you knew a string to search for, you could probably do that and figure out where the file starts and ends just by looking at the content.
magic1
October 1st, 2001, 09:33 AM
use norton utilities for recovery
it works i have tried it
and just pray to god
Conf1rm3d_K1ll
October 13th, 2001, 06:58 AM
I've never heard of an "un partition" but I've heard of a "re format"!:D
Half^A^Biscuit
October 22nd, 2001, 03:06 PM
jparker... how could u "accidently" partition your drive... frankly if u make a mistake then u deserve to lose your data as far as im concerned :)
but im sure that Forensic scientists have ways of diving thru your data to a certain extent... once the data allocation tables are screwed u do have big problems, but then again the data is still there. if u really want to stop someone reading your drive in a hurry and dont care about keeping the drive.. why doing u just open the casing and hit it with a hammer :)..
trust me.. those ding's in the disk's surface arnt good :)
:p
p0lix
October 22nd, 2001, 04:15 PM
There are several ways to get the data back. But the only way your going to do it is to buy a program that does it for you. I use a program called R-Studio and it allows me to go back through any partition that has been on the drive. The farther back you go the mor corrupt the files get of course, but if you have just formatted it and haven't installed much then it will go back and recover any and all files that you need.
-p0liX
Ghost_25inf
October 27th, 2001, 11:16 AM
I take it you are running NT or 2k well here is what I can tell you from my studys for my MCSE with a partition you needed to make it a dynamic drive and when you are reverting back to a basic you do lose the information that was put on that partition. but dont worry too much because if you back that all up you will be ok to get what you need off the disks. look in your help files under dynamic or partitions that will help too. have fun... Question why do you want to revert back to basic anyways partitioned drives run better and faster and its also easyer to defrag.
BeachCat
November 5th, 2001, 11:23 PM
If you made the new partition the same size it may be possible
to find the old still there -
Depends on if you clobbered the whole disk or just removed
a partition and left the rest.
Prat
November 5th, 2001, 11:35 PM
Well one day back in the days of me being a *nix newbie (we all go through that expermental stage im sure some people are just to proud to admit it :P) I decided to see what would happen if I decided to delete the partition tables and change the hex for my ext2fs partition to fat 16.. My *nix partition still worked... it was wierd.. anyways...
ThePreacher
November 7th, 2001, 07:29 AM
How would I go about deleting a linux partition? After I tried to put windows back on that hard drive, I found that about 8 gig was stuck in some linux partition and would not erase using FDisk. It says that there is 8 gigs in a logical drive and cannot be removed until the logical drive is removed. Only problem is that when I go to delete the logical drives FDisk says there are none. Is there some form format that deletes everything on the drive including the master boot record the logical drives and all partitions.
Terr
November 7th, 2001, 08:41 AM
If you're gonna re-build your system anyway, to some extent, I would recommend XOSL as a boot manager. Worked fine for me when I did use it, and it's free. You can also get the source, and I believe it comes with a fairly decent partition manager that should be able to deal with most different formats.
Matty_Cross
November 7th, 2001, 08:46 AM
ThePreacher,
I have a program (GDISK) which comes with Ghost which might be able to do the trick.. if you still need the help, PM me and I'll email you it.....
Ghost_25inf
November 7th, 2001, 08:55 AM
You know YOU GOT ME STUMPED, but like any good computer person they have a few good computer geeks working at help desk that can give me the answer. So let me get back with you in a day or two. Email matrix3475@aol.com or bellc005@hawaii.rr.com
I still dont know why I have aol when I have cable?
Ghost_25inf
November 7th, 2001, 09:23 AM
Hey I got one trick that might work.
try this go to ms dos promt if you have that. at the C colen type DELTREE \y C;\*.*
try that Ill still get with my freind to find out.
ThePreacher
November 7th, 2001, 09:33 AM
I tried using del *.* but found that it only deleted the windows partition still leaving the linux partition. I remember seeing a BIOS that could slowly format a hard drive erasing everything. The problem was that it took eight hours to do a 1 gig hard drive. Anyway I looked on my BIOS and did not see a similar option. Where can I get XOSL? and does anyone use System Commander as a dual boot loader?
Matty_Cross
November 7th, 2001, 09:46 AM
Preacher..
I have upload GDisk to my Website.. You can download it from there. It is the most powerful disk partitioning utility I've seen, and its pretty quick too....
my website is www.geocities.com/big_matty_c
ThePreacher
November 7th, 2001, 10:25 AM
Thanks. Ill dig into it tommorrow.