On 05.06.2019 19:52, Vipul wrote:
Any kind of disk\partition manipulations should begin with data backup, but I think you've figured that by now.I had a dual booted PC ( Windows and Debian in HP notebook with 1 TB hard-disk) and from few months Windows cannot starts ( because one day I was in hurry change size of two of partitions using "gparted' and to fix this I had many solutions but failed) so, yestarday I decided to fix it by using HP system recovery option. When I run system recovery whole system was freezed for more than half hour so, I decided to forcefully shutdown machine by pressing power button after that I power on my machine BIOS message shows "No operating system found" ( all EFI files are deleted even which are in HP folder) and I ended up with like this /dev/sda1 567296 158795775 158228480 75.5G Microsoft basic data /dev/sda2 158795776 159942655 1146880 560M Microsoft basic data /dev/sda3 1920552960 1953513471 32960512 15.7G Microsoft basic data /dev/sda4 2048 567295 565248 276M EFI System And an un-allocated space of 839.4 GB. I mainly concerned about data in Linux partition data (which was in sda8). Is there a way to recover data from un-allocated space? I can send any kind of log if required. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. In order to recover any data you should first stop using this HDD (don't mount it as writable) and get yourself another HDD with suitable size, that will serve as destination for recovered data. You'll have to remove HDD from your notebook and connect it to a PC with standard SATA cable along with destination HDD. With that setup, you have to use R-Studio software (They have free version for Linux partitions, IFAIK) to scan source HDD for traces of partition table and LBA offset of partition that was "sda8". If R-Studio will manage to find right offset and recognize filesystem then you will be able to start automatic scan for files available for full or partial recovery. Success is solely depends on how destructive was HP system recovery process. Depending on how valuable your data was you probably will have to resort to professional data recovery services, which will do roughly the same procedures as I described above and charge substantial amounts of money for it. Since you won't write anything to your source HDD and it is not mechanically failing, it is safe to try to recover data by yourself first. -- With kindest regards, Alexander. ⢀⣴⠾⠻⢶⣦⠀ ⣾⠁⢠⠒⠀⣿⡁ Debian - The universal operating system ⢿⡄⠘⠷⠚⠋⠀ https://www.debian.org ⠈⠳⣄⠀⠀⠀⠀ |