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| diff --git a/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html b/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html deleted file mode 100644 index b63ba5a..0000000 --- a/unix/2019-09-28-my-preferred-method-for-data-recovery.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,282 +0,0 @@ -<!DOCTYPE html> -<html> -  <head> -    <link rel="stylesheet" href="/includes/stylesheet.css" /> -    <meta charset="utf-8" /> -    <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1" /> -    <meta -      property="og:description" -      content="The World Wide Web pages of Adam Carpenter" -    /> -    <meta property="og:image" content="/includes/images/logo_diag.png" /> -    <meta property="og:site_name" content="53hor.net" /> -    <meta property="og:title" content="How I Do Data Recovery" /> -    <meta property="og:type" content="website" /> -    <meta property="og:url" content="https://www.53hor.net" /> -    <title>53hornet ➙ How I Do Data Recovery</title> -  </head> - -  <body> -    <nav> -      <ul> -        <li> -          <a href="/"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/home-roof.svg" /> -            Home -          </a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="/about.html"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/information-variant.svg" /> -            About -          </a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="/software.html"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/git.svg" /> -            Software -          </a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="/hosted.html"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/desktop-tower.svg" /> -            Hosted -          </a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a type="application/rss+xml" href="/rss.xml"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/rss.svg" /> -            RSS -          </a> -        </li> -        <li> -          <a href="/contact.html"> -            <img src="/includes/icons/at.svg" /> -            Contact -          </a> -        </li> -      </ul> -    </nav> - -    <article> -      <h1>How I Do Data Recovery</h1> - -      <p> -        This week Amy plugged in her flash drive to discover that there were no -        files on it. Weeks before there had been dozens of large cuts of footage -        that she needed to edit down for work. Hours of recordings were -        seemingly gone. And the most annoying part was the drive had worked -        perfectly on several other occasions. Just not now that the footage was -        actually needed of course. Initially it looked like everything had been -        wiped clean, however both Amy's Mac and her PC thought the drive was -        half full. It's overall capacity was 64GB but it showed only about 36GB -        free. So there still had to be data on there if we could find the right -        tool to salvage it. -      </p> - -      <p> -        Luckily this wasn't the first time I had to recover accidentally (or -        magically) deleted files. I had previously done so with some success at -        my tech support job, for some college friends, and for my in-laws' -        retired laptops. So I had a pretty clear idea of what to expect. The -        only trick was finding a tool that knew what files it was looking for. -        The camera that took the video clips was a Sony and apparently they -        record into <code>m2ts</code> files, which are kind of a unique format -        in that they only show up on Blu-Ray discs and Sony camcorders. Enter my -        favorite two tools for dealing with potentially-destroyed data: -        <code>ddrescue</code> and <code>photorec</code>. -      </p> - -      <h2>DDRescue</h2> - -      <p> -        <code>ddrescue</code> is a godsend of a tool. If you've ever used -        <code>dd</code> before, forget about it. Use <code>ddrescue</code>. You -        might as well <code>alias dd=ddrescue</code> because it's that great. By -        default it has a plethora of additional options, displays the progress -        as it works, recovers and retries in the event of I/O errors, and does -        everything that good old <code>dd</code> can do. It's particularly good -        at protecting partitions or disks that have been corrupted or damaged by -        rescuing undamaged portions first. Oh, and have you ever had to cancel a -        <code>dd</code> operation? Did I mention that <code>ddrescue</code> can -        pause and resume operations? It's that good. -      </p> - -      <h2>PhotoRec</h2> - -      <p> -        <code>photorec</code> is probably the best missing file recovery tool -        I've ever used in my entire life. And I've used quite a few. I've never -        had as good results as I've had with <code>photorec</code> with other -        tools like Recuva et. al. And <code>photorec</code> isn't just for -        photos, it can recover documents (a la Office suite), music, images, -        config files, and videos (including the very odd -        <code>m2ts</code> format!). The other nice thing is -        <code>photorec</code> will work on just about any source. It's also free -        software which makes me wonder why there are like $50 recovery tools for -        Windows that look super sketchy. -      </p> - -      <h2>In Practice</h2> - -      <p> -        So here's what I did to get Amy's files back. Luckily she didn't write -        anything out to the drive afterward so the chances (I thought) were -        pretty good that I would get <em>something</em> back. The first thing I -        always do is make a full image of whatever media I'm trying to recover -        from. I do this for a couple of reasons. First of all it's a backup. If -        something goes wrong during recovery I don't have to worry about the -        original, fragile media being damaged or wiped. Furthermore, I can work -        with multiple copies at a time. If it's a large image that means -        multiple tools or even multiple PCs can work on it at once. It's also -        just plain faster working off a disk image than a measly flash drive. So -        I used <code>ddrescue</code> to make an image of Amy's drive. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -$ sudo ddrescue /dev/sdb1 amy-lexar.dd -GNU ddrescue 1.24 -Press Ctrl-C to interrupt -     ipos:   54198 kB, non-trimmed:        0 B,  current rate:   7864 kB/s -     opos:   54198 kB, non-scraped:        0 B,  average rate:  18066 kB/s -non-tried:   63967 MB,  bad-sector:        0 B,    error rate:       0 B/s -  rescued:   54198 kB,   bad areas:        0,        run time:          2s -pct rescued:    0.08%, read errors:        0,  remaining time:         59m -                              time since last successful read:         n/a -Copying non-tried blocks... Pass 1 (forwards) -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        The result was a very large partition image that I could fearlessly play -        around with. -      </p> - -      <pre> -		<code> -$ ll amy-lexar.dd --rw-r--r-- 1 root root 60G Sep 24 02:45 amy-lexar.dd -        </code> -	  </pre> - -      <p> -        Then I could run <code>photorec</code> on the image. This brings up a -        TUI with all of the listed media that I can try and recover from. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -$ sudo photorec amy-lexar.dd - -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - -  PhotoRec is free software, and -comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. - -Select a media (use Arrow keys, then press Enter): ->Disk amy-lexar.dd - 64 GB / 59 GiB (RO) - ->[Proceed ]  [  Quit  ] - -Note: -Disk capacity must be correctly detected for a successful recovery. -If a disk listed above has incorrect size, check HD jumper settings, BIOS -detection, and install the latest OS patches and disk drivers. -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        After hitting proceed <code>photorec</code> asks if you want to scan -        just a particular partition or the whole disk (if you made a whole disk -        image). I can usually get away with just selecting the partition I know -        the files are on and starting a search. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - -Disk amy-lexar.dd - 64 GB / 59 GiB (RO) - -     Partition                  Start        End    Size in sectors -      Unknown                  0   0  1  7783 139  4  125042656 [Whole disk] ->   P FAT32                    0   0  1  7783 139  4  125042656 [NO NAME] - ->[ Search ]  [Options ]  [File Opt]  [  Quit  ] -                              Start file recovery -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        Then <code>photorec</code> asks a couple of questions about the -        formatting of the media. It can usually figure them out all by itself so -        I just use the default options unless it's way out in left field. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - -   P FAT32                    0   0  1  7783 139  4  125042656 [NO NAME] - -To recover lost files, PhotoRec need to know the filesystem type where the -file were stored: - [ ext2/ext3 ] ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem ->[ Other     ] FAT/NTFS/HFS+/ReiserFS/... -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        Now this menu is where I don't just go with the default path. -        <code>photorec</code> will offer to search just unallocated space or the -        entire partition. I always go for the whole partition here; sometimes -        I'll get back files that I didn't really care about but more often than -        not I end up rescuing more data this way. In this scenario searching -        just unallocated space found no files at all. So I told -        <code>photorec</code> to search everything. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 -http://www.cgsecurity.org - -   P FAT32                    0   0  1  7783 139  4  125042656 [NO NAME] - - -Please choose if all space need to be analysed: - [   Free    ] Scan for file from FAT32 unallocated space only ->[   Whole   ] Extract files from whole partition -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        Now it'll ask where you want to save any files it finds. I threw them -        all into a directory under home that I could zip up and send to Amy's -        Mac later. -      </p> - -      <pre><code> -PhotoRec 7.0, Data Recovery Utility, April 2015 - -Please select a destination to save the recovered files. -Do not choose to write the files to the same partition they were stored on. -Keys: Arrow keys to select another directory -      C when the destination is correct -      Q to quit -Directory /home/adam - drwx------  1000  1000      4096 28-Sep-2019 12:10 . - drwxr-xr-x     0     0      4096 26-Jan-2019 15:32 .. ->drwxr-xr-x  1000  1000      4096 28-Sep-2019 12:10 amy-lexar-recovery -	  </code></pre> - -      <p> -        And then just press <code>C</code>. <code>photrec</code> will start -        copying all of the files it finds into that directory. It reports what -        kinds of files it found and how many it was able to locate. I was able -        to recover all of Amy's lost footage this way, past, along with some -        straggler files that had been on the drive at one point. This has worked -        for me many times in the past, both on newer devices like flash drives -        and on super old, sketchy IDE hard drives. I probably won't ever pay for -        data recovery unless a drive has been physically damaged in some way. In -        other words, this software works great for me and I don't foresee the -        need for anything else out there. It's simple to use and is typically -        pretty reliable. -      </p> -    </article> -  </body> -</html> |