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Data recovery
Data recovery, is the method or process of recovering your data. It is usually done after drive failure, accidental deletion of data, or by the police when recovering suspect's data from a computer.
Contents
Data Recovery Tools
- extundelete - When using the extended filesystem (ext3, ext4) on *nix, this should be what you try before spending hours waiting for testdisk/photorec to crawl over the partition or image. Just remount as read only. Supports recovery of specific, whole directories and filenames.
- PhotoRec - Ignores the filesystem completely meaning that it can fish out files from almost any file system - even if severely damaged. It recognises most common filetypes and does it's best to recover them. It won't however recover filenames or directories and it will recover everything it finds. There fore you may end up manually fishing out files you actually wanted. Great for recovering memorycards.
- TestDisk - Comes with PhotoRec. Recovers lost and damaged partitions.
- Recuva - Proprietary
Note: TestDisk and PhotoRec come as a package, TestDisk is used to "help recover lost partitions and/or make non-booting disks bootable again when these symptoms are caused by faulty software, certain types of viruses or human error (such as accidentally deleting a Partition Table)."[1] Whereas PhotoRec is for recovering data, therefore depending on your needs either one may be appropriate.
First steps in recovering data
- DO NOT WRITE TO THE DRIVE
- Doing so may overwrite the information that you wish to recover
- Browsing the internet, executing commands and installing software often write to disk so avoid these.
- You may want to cut the power to your computer to be extra sure
- And no, don't do it the clean way. Just hold down the powerbutton for 5 to 10 seconds.
- Follow the process detailed below
- Next time, 'keep an up-to-date backup
Recovering deleted files
Recovering a failing drive
You can tell that your hard drive is failing if it causes your computer to hang in the BIOS when connected, if it has a "Current Pending Sector Count" > 0 in the SMART info, or if it's making unusual noises. Here's what you have to do to save your data, if the hard drive still mounts.
- First, get another hard drive large enough to image the failing one onto.
- Connect the failing hard drive to an internal SATA port on your computer, if it's in a USB enclosure open it up and remove the drive.
- Next, boot from a GNU/Linux LiveCD and mount the failing drive Read-Only.
- Use an imaging program such as dd_rescue or an equivalent so that it doesn't get stuck forever rereading one sector when it encounters read errors.
- Finally, if you are able to mount the disk image, do that. If you are not able to mount the copy, try Testdisk and Photorec or Recuva to recover data from the image. Recover the saved data to yet another separate partition.
- If you had to use PhotoRec, you will probably want to disable recovery of plain text files unless there's something in that format you want to save since it produces a massive amount of tiny text files from most hard drives. Stick to photos and Office documents for most people. Fragmented files will probably be unrecoverable.
Android
dd can be used on Android devices to image their storage partitions. No password is required unless the storage is encrypted. The device must either have USB Debugging enabled, or be flashed with a custom bootloader (which, when booted into, has USB Debugging enabled). You will also need an external storage card with enough capacity to take the dd image. Use Android Debug Bridge (adb) from the android-sdk to connect to the device. From there you can mount the external storage card and use dd to image the required partitions.