1

My external HDD suddenly decided that it doesn't want to mount one of the partitions anymore. When trying to open under Windows, I got "corrupted partition. Can't open" type of error. So I just formatted that dude, but it would be nice to recover some files.

I tried with R-Linux GUI software and was unsuccessful - could not read any deleted files. Then decided to try the good old TestDisk in the terminal. I go to Advanced Filesystem Utils and then for the selected partition I choose Undelete but cannot find any deleted files.

I haven't installed any OS on top of that drive after it has been formatted. Not even a single .txt file has been copied to the drive after the formatting.

Is the recovery of any files doomed? Do you have any magical suggestions?

P.S. I formatted the partition from Windows, and the partition itself is NTFS.

Journeyman Geek
  • 129,178

1 Answers1

1

Probably you are not doomed, not yet!
Not until you will try all the method known to restore your data!

Since you said you have done a "Quick format", the procedure

leaves all your data in place and makes the drive appear to be empty. [1]

Probably you can try easily Photorec since you have just installed testdisk.

If the HDD had physical damages and you have enough space elsewhere you can do a raw copy with ddrescue (not dd_rescue) and then work on that one in order to minimize the possibility to brick your HDD.

References:

  1. How to format a hard drive in Windows...
  2. On "Forensics Wiki"
  3. On "What's the difference between ddrescue, gddrescue, and dd_rescue?"
  4. On internet "LINUX - dd_rescue VS ddrescue (gddrescue BEST)"
  5. Another answer applicable.
Hastur
  • 18,942