How to recover a deleted NTFS partition with data

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up vote
13
down vote

favorite
8












I am on Ubuntu 12.04 64-bits



I accidentally deleted a NTFS 255 GB partition using Gparted, and yes it contains LOTS of important data.



Upon realizing the deletion I haven't yet created any file-system on it. So it still shows Unallocated.



enter image description here



I tried Testdisk , but it shows entire partitions created from the beginning.



This sdb is my secondary drive with Xubuntu and Kubuntu on it. And that 255 GB NTFS partition was cross platform storage drive.



I am currently in sda with Ubuntu and Win7 in dual boot, which enables me to use it as Safe recovery option rather then Live USB drive.



First , should i allocate it to ? file-System for better recovery .



Second , i really need to recover data from this drive so please give me possible suggestions and proven methods of data recovery.



Third ,does Testdisk requires deleted partition to be allocated for its recovery .



I am currently trying the answer seen here https://askubuntu.com/a/24951/63025 with Testdisk scanning for partition second time, hoping to recover it.



It looks a duplicate but i can't confirm if the OP got it right. Since my first doubt is to allocate it or not.



If any clarification required please do comment ,i will add it.



Edit: TestDisk deeper search results.



 The following partitions can't be recovered:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
> HPFS - NTFS 22241 107 11 55592 3 27 535777280
FAT32 LBA 274460 158 19 460576 228 16 2989957948

NTFS, 274 GB / 255 GiB
& for FAT32 LBA 1530 GB / 1425 GiB









share|improve this question























  • Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:18










  • yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
    – atenz
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:23














up vote
13
down vote

favorite
8












I am on Ubuntu 12.04 64-bits



I accidentally deleted a NTFS 255 GB partition using Gparted, and yes it contains LOTS of important data.



Upon realizing the deletion I haven't yet created any file-system on it. So it still shows Unallocated.



enter image description here



I tried Testdisk , but it shows entire partitions created from the beginning.



This sdb is my secondary drive with Xubuntu and Kubuntu on it. And that 255 GB NTFS partition was cross platform storage drive.



I am currently in sda with Ubuntu and Win7 in dual boot, which enables me to use it as Safe recovery option rather then Live USB drive.



First , should i allocate it to ? file-System for better recovery .



Second , i really need to recover data from this drive so please give me possible suggestions and proven methods of data recovery.



Third ,does Testdisk requires deleted partition to be allocated for its recovery .



I am currently trying the answer seen here https://askubuntu.com/a/24951/63025 with Testdisk scanning for partition second time, hoping to recover it.



It looks a duplicate but i can't confirm if the OP got it right. Since my first doubt is to allocate it or not.



If any clarification required please do comment ,i will add it.



Edit: TestDisk deeper search results.



 The following partitions can't be recovered:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
> HPFS - NTFS 22241 107 11 55592 3 27 535777280
FAT32 LBA 274460 158 19 460576 228 16 2989957948

NTFS, 274 GB / 255 GiB
& for FAT32 LBA 1530 GB / 1425 GiB









share|improve this question























  • Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:18










  • yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
    – atenz
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:23












up vote
13
down vote

favorite
8









up vote
13
down vote

favorite
8






8





I am on Ubuntu 12.04 64-bits



I accidentally deleted a NTFS 255 GB partition using Gparted, and yes it contains LOTS of important data.



Upon realizing the deletion I haven't yet created any file-system on it. So it still shows Unallocated.



enter image description here



I tried Testdisk , but it shows entire partitions created from the beginning.



This sdb is my secondary drive with Xubuntu and Kubuntu on it. And that 255 GB NTFS partition was cross platform storage drive.



I am currently in sda with Ubuntu and Win7 in dual boot, which enables me to use it as Safe recovery option rather then Live USB drive.



First , should i allocate it to ? file-System for better recovery .



Second , i really need to recover data from this drive so please give me possible suggestions and proven methods of data recovery.



Third ,does Testdisk requires deleted partition to be allocated for its recovery .



I am currently trying the answer seen here https://askubuntu.com/a/24951/63025 with Testdisk scanning for partition second time, hoping to recover it.



It looks a duplicate but i can't confirm if the OP got it right. Since my first doubt is to allocate it or not.



If any clarification required please do comment ,i will add it.



Edit: TestDisk deeper search results.



 The following partitions can't be recovered:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
> HPFS - NTFS 22241 107 11 55592 3 27 535777280
FAT32 LBA 274460 158 19 460576 228 16 2989957948

NTFS, 274 GB / 255 GiB
& for FAT32 LBA 1530 GB / 1425 GiB









share|improve this question















I am on Ubuntu 12.04 64-bits



I accidentally deleted a NTFS 255 GB partition using Gparted, and yes it contains LOTS of important data.



Upon realizing the deletion I haven't yet created any file-system on it. So it still shows Unallocated.



enter image description here



I tried Testdisk , but it shows entire partitions created from the beginning.



This sdb is my secondary drive with Xubuntu and Kubuntu on it. And that 255 GB NTFS partition was cross platform storage drive.



I am currently in sda with Ubuntu and Win7 in dual boot, which enables me to use it as Safe recovery option rather then Live USB drive.



First , should i allocate it to ? file-System for better recovery .



Second , i really need to recover data from this drive so please give me possible suggestions and proven methods of data recovery.



Third ,does Testdisk requires deleted partition to be allocated for its recovery .



I am currently trying the answer seen here https://askubuntu.com/a/24951/63025 with Testdisk scanning for partition second time, hoping to recover it.



It looks a duplicate but i can't confirm if the OP got it right. Since my first doubt is to allocate it or not.



If any clarification required please do comment ,i will add it.



Edit: TestDisk deeper search results.



 The following partitions can't be recovered:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
> HPFS - NTFS 22241 107 11 55592 3 27 535777280
FAT32 LBA 274460 158 19 460576 228 16 2989957948

NTFS, 274 GB / 255 GiB
& for FAT32 LBA 1530 GB / 1425 GiB






partitioning data-recovery






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share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:23









Community♦

1




1










asked Aug 2 '12 at 12:57









atenz

10.1k43559




10.1k43559











  • Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:18










  • yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
    – atenz
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:23
















  • Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:18










  • yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
    – atenz
    Aug 2 '12 at 13:23















Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 13:18




Did you actually commit the changes? If you just delete, it will not do anything on disk until you manyally allow it to go ahead with the changes.
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 13:18












yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
– atenz
Aug 2 '12 at 13:23




yes i Deleted it , committed the Changes.
– atenz
Aug 2 '12 at 13:23










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
15
down vote



accepted










Well. Testdisk really works. I have documented in the past my previous 500 GB Data loss which was up to 80% recovered via Testdisk.



Take a look at this video in Youtube: Recover deleted partitions using Testdisk in Ubuntu #11.



I couldn't fully recover my data because of I was trying to recover using different tools, (including MS Based tools which I don't recommend because of it resulted in the damage of the data itself. So I strongly suggest you to first run the steps mentioned in the video in order to bring back the partition, after which you will be able to undelete/recover any data loss that could happen during data recovery.



I am following your question closely even if downvoted just in order to provide help. I know this is not a forum and have read the rules but I have experienced this in the past and I know how it feels. Just for information: It took me 2+ weeks to fully recover my data. So please be patient. I am sure we'll find a way to bring your data back.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:06







  • 1




    Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
    – Geppettvs D'Constanzo
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:24






  • 2




    I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:25










  • The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:29











  • Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
    – Salathiel Genèse
    Mar 14 at 23:12

















up vote
3
down vote













First you shouldn't allocate it, but even if you do, with RAW recovery it doesn't matter. But as I said its better not to allocate, just to make it easier.



RAW recovery means to read files without reference to any operating system. The RAW scan mode can locate the files without the aid of file system. I would recommend Ubuntu Rescue Remix.




Ubuntu Rescue Remix is a Linux Live CD. It already comes with a whole
array of data recovery tools. One of them is Ddrescue. Ddrescue, is
one of the best data recovery programs available and it is free.
Ddrescue works by extracting a raw image of your hard drive and
transferring it to another drive. It extracts data bit by bit,
regardless of the file system on the drive. The reason it works even
when hard drives are dying is because Ddrescue retries several times
and even tries to read data backwards. The procedure sometimes can
take days, but it is very effective.1




Read on



Download the ISO CD image of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, burn the CD and boot the computer with it.



1Source:GeekyProjects






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:30









protected by RolandiXor♦ Dec 18 '13 at 2:44



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?














2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
15
down vote



accepted










Well. Testdisk really works. I have documented in the past my previous 500 GB Data loss which was up to 80% recovered via Testdisk.



Take a look at this video in Youtube: Recover deleted partitions using Testdisk in Ubuntu #11.



I couldn't fully recover my data because of I was trying to recover using different tools, (including MS Based tools which I don't recommend because of it resulted in the damage of the data itself. So I strongly suggest you to first run the steps mentioned in the video in order to bring back the partition, after which you will be able to undelete/recover any data loss that could happen during data recovery.



I am following your question closely even if downvoted just in order to provide help. I know this is not a forum and have read the rules but I have experienced this in the past and I know how it feels. Just for information: It took me 2+ weeks to fully recover my data. So please be patient. I am sure we'll find a way to bring your data back.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:06







  • 1




    Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
    – Geppettvs D'Constanzo
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:24






  • 2




    I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:25










  • The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:29











  • Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
    – Salathiel Genèse
    Mar 14 at 23:12














up vote
15
down vote



accepted










Well. Testdisk really works. I have documented in the past my previous 500 GB Data loss which was up to 80% recovered via Testdisk.



Take a look at this video in Youtube: Recover deleted partitions using Testdisk in Ubuntu #11.



I couldn't fully recover my data because of I was trying to recover using different tools, (including MS Based tools which I don't recommend because of it resulted in the damage of the data itself. So I strongly suggest you to first run the steps mentioned in the video in order to bring back the partition, after which you will be able to undelete/recover any data loss that could happen during data recovery.



I am following your question closely even if downvoted just in order to provide help. I know this is not a forum and have read the rules but I have experienced this in the past and I know how it feels. Just for information: It took me 2+ weeks to fully recover my data. So please be patient. I am sure we'll find a way to bring your data back.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer


















  • 1




    Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:06







  • 1




    Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
    – Geppettvs D'Constanzo
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:24






  • 2




    I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:25










  • The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:29











  • Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
    – Salathiel Genèse
    Mar 14 at 23:12












up vote
15
down vote



accepted







up vote
15
down vote



accepted






Well. Testdisk really works. I have documented in the past my previous 500 GB Data loss which was up to 80% recovered via Testdisk.



Take a look at this video in Youtube: Recover deleted partitions using Testdisk in Ubuntu #11.



I couldn't fully recover my data because of I was trying to recover using different tools, (including MS Based tools which I don't recommend because of it resulted in the damage of the data itself. So I strongly suggest you to first run the steps mentioned in the video in order to bring back the partition, after which you will be able to undelete/recover any data loss that could happen during data recovery.



I am following your question closely even if downvoted just in order to provide help. I know this is not a forum and have read the rules but I have experienced this in the past and I know how it feels. Just for information: It took me 2+ weeks to fully recover my data. So please be patient. I am sure we'll find a way to bring your data back.



Good luck!






share|improve this answer














Well. Testdisk really works. I have documented in the past my previous 500 GB Data loss which was up to 80% recovered via Testdisk.



Take a look at this video in Youtube: Recover deleted partitions using Testdisk in Ubuntu #11.



I couldn't fully recover my data because of I was trying to recover using different tools, (including MS Based tools which I don't recommend because of it resulted in the damage of the data itself. So I strongly suggest you to first run the steps mentioned in the video in order to bring back the partition, after which you will be able to undelete/recover any data loss that could happen during data recovery.



I am following your question closely even if downvoted just in order to provide help. I know this is not a forum and have read the rules but I have experienced this in the past and I know how it feels. Just for information: It took me 2+ weeks to fully recover my data. So please be patient. I am sure we'll find a way to bring your data back.



Good luck!







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Sep 17 at 1:22









mikewhatever

22.7k76585




22.7k76585










answered Aug 2 '12 at 13:58









Geppettvs D'Constanzo

16k43280




16k43280







  • 1




    Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:06







  • 1




    Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
    – Geppettvs D'Constanzo
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:24






  • 2




    I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:25










  • The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:29











  • Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
    – Salathiel Genèse
    Mar 14 at 23:12












  • 1




    Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:06







  • 1




    Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
    – Geppettvs D'Constanzo
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:24






  • 2




    I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
    – hexafraction
    Aug 2 '12 at 15:25










  • The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:29











  • Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
    – Salathiel Genèse
    Mar 14 at 23:12







1




1




Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 15:06





Maybe giving instructions from the Testdisk wiki could help?
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 15:06





1




1




Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
– Geppettvs D'Constanzo
Aug 2 '12 at 15:24




Yeah sure: Testdisk and useful information related can be reached clicking here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk and a step-by-step procedure with illustrations can be seen here: cgsecurity.org/wiki/TestDisk_Step_By_Step
– Geppettvs D'Constanzo
Aug 2 '12 at 15:24




2




2




I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 15:25




I was referring to using that as documentation for your answer.
– hexafraction
Aug 2 '12 at 15:25












The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
– atenz
Aug 25 '12 at 12:29





The video helped thanks , and thanks @GeppettvsD'Constanzo a lot for step-by-step link , i also posted the steps as answer here .
– atenz
Aug 25 '12 at 12:29













Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
– Salathiel Genèse
Mar 14 at 23:12




Testdisk restored absolutely restored all my customer data on the mistakenly deleted partition.
– Salathiel Genèse
Mar 14 at 23:12












up vote
3
down vote













First you shouldn't allocate it, but even if you do, with RAW recovery it doesn't matter. But as I said its better not to allocate, just to make it easier.



RAW recovery means to read files without reference to any operating system. The RAW scan mode can locate the files without the aid of file system. I would recommend Ubuntu Rescue Remix.




Ubuntu Rescue Remix is a Linux Live CD. It already comes with a whole
array of data recovery tools. One of them is Ddrescue. Ddrescue, is
one of the best data recovery programs available and it is free.
Ddrescue works by extracting a raw image of your hard drive and
transferring it to another drive. It extracts data bit by bit,
regardless of the file system on the drive. The reason it works even
when hard drives are dying is because Ddrescue retries several times
and even tries to read data backwards. The procedure sometimes can
take days, but it is very effective.1




Read on



Download the ISO CD image of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, burn the CD and boot the computer with it.



1Source:GeekyProjects






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:30














up vote
3
down vote













First you shouldn't allocate it, but even if you do, with RAW recovery it doesn't matter. But as I said its better not to allocate, just to make it easier.



RAW recovery means to read files without reference to any operating system. The RAW scan mode can locate the files without the aid of file system. I would recommend Ubuntu Rescue Remix.




Ubuntu Rescue Remix is a Linux Live CD. It already comes with a whole
array of data recovery tools. One of them is Ddrescue. Ddrescue, is
one of the best data recovery programs available and it is free.
Ddrescue works by extracting a raw image of your hard drive and
transferring it to another drive. It extracts data bit by bit,
regardless of the file system on the drive. The reason it works even
when hard drives are dying is because Ddrescue retries several times
and even tries to read data backwards. The procedure sometimes can
take days, but it is very effective.1




Read on



Download the ISO CD image of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, burn the CD and boot the computer with it.



1Source:GeekyProjects






share|improve this answer






















  • Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:30












up vote
3
down vote










up vote
3
down vote









First you shouldn't allocate it, but even if you do, with RAW recovery it doesn't matter. But as I said its better not to allocate, just to make it easier.



RAW recovery means to read files without reference to any operating system. The RAW scan mode can locate the files without the aid of file system. I would recommend Ubuntu Rescue Remix.




Ubuntu Rescue Remix is a Linux Live CD. It already comes with a whole
array of data recovery tools. One of them is Ddrescue. Ddrescue, is
one of the best data recovery programs available and it is free.
Ddrescue works by extracting a raw image of your hard drive and
transferring it to another drive. It extracts data bit by bit,
regardless of the file system on the drive. The reason it works even
when hard drives are dying is because Ddrescue retries several times
and even tries to read data backwards. The procedure sometimes can
take days, but it is very effective.1




Read on



Download the ISO CD image of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, burn the CD and boot the computer with it.



1Source:GeekyProjects






share|improve this answer














First you shouldn't allocate it, but even if you do, with RAW recovery it doesn't matter. But as I said its better not to allocate, just to make it easier.



RAW recovery means to read files without reference to any operating system. The RAW scan mode can locate the files without the aid of file system. I would recommend Ubuntu Rescue Remix.




Ubuntu Rescue Remix is a Linux Live CD. It already comes with a whole
array of data recovery tools. One of them is Ddrescue. Ddrescue, is
one of the best data recovery programs available and it is free.
Ddrescue works by extracting a raw image of your hard drive and
transferring it to another drive. It extracts data bit by bit,
regardless of the file system on the drive. The reason it works even
when hard drives are dying is because Ddrescue retries several times
and even tries to read data backwards. The procedure sometimes can
take days, but it is very effective.1




Read on



Download the ISO CD image of Ubuntu Rescue Remix, burn the CD and boot the computer with it.



1Source:GeekyProjects







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Aug 2 '12 at 13:56

























answered Aug 2 '12 at 13:26









Mitch♦

81.6k14167227




81.6k14167227











  • Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:30
















  • Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
    – atenz
    Aug 25 '12 at 12:30















Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
– atenz
Aug 25 '12 at 12:30




Thanks @Mitch for alternate solution , i am using it for other Disk recovery.
– atenz
Aug 25 '12 at 12:30





protected by RolandiXor♦ Dec 18 '13 at 2:44



Thank you for your interest in this question.
Because it has attracted low-quality or spam answers that had to be removed, posting an answer now requires 10 reputation on this site (the association bonus does not count).



Would you like to answer one of these unanswered questions instead?


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