• Hello_there@fedia.io
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    10 days ago

    Is this the one that can scan a damaged hard drive to see where the flipled bit is, to fix that? I remember coming across that rescue disk program a few years ago.

      • Hello_there@fedia.io
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        10 days ago

        Maybe… I have a couple of hard drives to rescue and I need to figure out how to approach it

        • zorflieg@lemmy.world
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          9 days ago

          I’ve used “getdataback” many times by Runtime software and it has worked the best for me over others I’ve tried.

        • Droolio@feddit.uk
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          10 days ago

          You should take it to a data recovery specialist if the data is really really important but for lightly-damaged sectors, you want ddrescue (oldie but goodie) or HDDSuperClone (no longer developed) or OpenSuperClone (fork of HDDSuperClone, more actively developed).

          You can combine some of these tools with commercial programs like dmde, UFS Explorer, or R-Studio - to target specific files for a quick result - but basically it’s best to get a full disk image off the bad drive onto another drive/image.

          • sem@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            10 days ago

            I used ddrescue for a failing drive of not critical stuff, and had great success. Lots of guides online. If I were doing it again though, I would NOT image the whole drive – just the partition of interest. That greatly simplifies running fsck on the image and mounting it to recover the files.

            • Droolio@feddit.uk
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              10 days ago

              Yep, I guess it depends on how much data of interest is on the drive. You can hook it up to dmde with a ddrescue/OpenSuperClone-mounted drive, which can let you index the filesystem while it streams content to the backup image. It reads and remembers sectors already copied, and you can target specific files/folders so you don’t have to touch most of the drive.

    • Droolio@feddit.uk
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      10 days ago

      No that’s either HDD Regenerator or SpinRite. Clonezilla is a sector-by-sector disk imaging program. (SpinRite et al are good for keeping old drives running for longer but if you want to do data recovery and really value your data, ddrescue or HDDSuperClone is what you want.)