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March 23rd, 2010, 05:00 AM
#1
Help - just deleted all my ISO files in Linux!
So, on day two of Nihil's make One Interesting Post a Day for Twenty-Eight Days Challenge, I did find myself already struggling... guess I'm just not that interesting... :P
Then, I did the unthinkable. Thinking I was removing a symbolic link to my external HD from my Slackware box, I typed "rm -R ISOs" and hit enter. Then fear gripped me as I remembered that I had actually moved all of my ISOs to that directory from my external HD the other day to save space.
So tell me, AO. What do I do to get my 10GB of ISOs back!? (Mostly legal copies of OSes and software such as Windows XP, Windows 2000, Office, and games etc that I've collected over the years.)
What a jackass right? Well **** happens. Now help me out on making it "un-happen"
Thanks!
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March 23rd, 2010, 03:26 PM
#2
Hi wiskic10_4,
Sorry to hear your tale of woe. I assume that the data is still there and has not been overwritten. I don't know of any linux data recovery software off the top of my head other than roadkil's "unstoppable copier"
Am I right in thinking that we are looking at a linux partition and not NTFS/FAT?
http://www.roadkil.net/program.php?ProgramID=29
It will do Linux 32 & 64 bit and 'doze 9.x through 7
It reads your drive at a low level and attempts to recover all files it finds, even if partially damaged. I can't remember if it can recover a selected partition or if it just goes at the whole drive.
I strongly suspect it is the whole drive (it used to be) but some clever stuff might have been added more recently
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March 23rd, 2010, 05:10 PM
#3
Thanks nihil,
Yeah, as soon as I realized what I had done, I started searching for a means of undoing it - careful not to save anything to the HD that may overwrite my recently deleted data.
Thanks for the link - I'll give it a shot tonight as soon as I get free and post back with the results. I've got to go on a job interview in a minute. But that's another post!
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March 23rd, 2010, 05:23 PM
#4
Good Luck mate!
BTW I downloaded the latest (January 2010) version and it does support partitions and even individual folders it would seem.
It has been expanded so you can use it as a backup application as well..........mind you, I could only try the Windows version, but would have thought that Linux was pretty much the same.
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March 24th, 2010, 03:30 AM
#5
arrgh.
Missing a dependency to run the link you gave. I could mess with it and make it work, but I've already downloaded ISOs for Win2000SP4, WinXPHomeSP2, WinXPProSP3 and XPMediaCenterEdition2005. I've got a friend that can get me Windows 7 and Office 2007 cheap from his work, so I think I'll just mourn my losses and learn a valuable lesson - backup (i.e. practice what I preach :P)
Thanks though nihil - I'll bet it would have worked if I weren't too lazy to try... guess the end would have had to justify the means.
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March 24th, 2010, 03:57 AM
#6
Hi wiskic10_4
It has certainly helped me save a few people's butts in the past, so I can personally recommend it.
One thing I really like is that it will recover stuff from damaged drives, when a lot of similar products just refuse to run if they can't find the MFT or any partitions. Obviously you need to be able to read the drive, but that is all.
OH! and it is free
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March 24th, 2010, 07:37 AM
#7
I guess I'm too late but for recovering files... I always keep on hand a hiren's boot cd.. it has about 5 or 6 file recovery apps.. shouldn't matter what the OS or partition type is if you're running the app off the bootcd
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March 24th, 2010, 08:45 AM
#8
I give a 2nd for Hirens. Has saved my butt a few times in the past. Worth the download and should find itself a useful part of your security toolkit.
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March 24th, 2010, 10:09 AM
#9
shouldn't matter what the OS or partition type is if you're running the app off the bootcd
Partly, certainly as far as the OS is concerned. However the partition type is important. Hirens is basically a Windows site and most of the tools are the same, so they are highly unlikely to work on a Linux file system partition.
The only one on his boot CD I know that will do the job is the one that I have already suggested: unstoppable copier.
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March 24th, 2010, 03:08 PM
#10
Originally Posted by nihil
Partly, certainly as far as the OS is concerned. However the partition type is important. Hirens is basically a Windows site and most of the tools are the same, so they are highly unlikely to work on a Linux file system partition.
The only one on his boot CD I know that will do the job is the one that I have already suggested: unstoppable copier.
That's strange as i've used Hirens for both Win & *nix related issues.
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