![testdisk none partition testdisk none partition](http://1.bp.blogspot.com/-mP-8yp4NYMM/Ut_wT3HReRI/AAAAAAAAFiA/3AJUxLu60K8/s1600/Analyse.gif)
I'm having a hard time determining which one was is the correct partition since I can't access a single on of them to list the files and I only have the EFI partition left. This is the output of a deep search with testdisk, it seems to be tottaly confused about what's on my drive because I never created an HFS partition: Not just difficult, most likely extremely difficult since I will first need to run "cryptsetup open /dev/sdbX (forgot the partition number)" to open the partition with my encryption password.
![testdisk none partition testdisk none partition](https://i.stack.imgur.com/bGOVu.png)
Those that have never had a hard drive fail. Note that the above does not work for Logical Volumes as the LVM metadata, not a filesystem, is at the start of the partition. Testdisk will report other starting blocks. Will try to mount the filesystem that starts 1048576 bytes from the start of the drive, read only, at /mnt/ Your first partition will start at block 2048. Once we know where testdisk thinks partitions start, we can convert that to an offset in bytes from the start of the disk and feed it to mount. We need to weed out the false positives first.Ĭopy and paste what it finds, or at least, post it without copy typing. I think you seed a deep scan.ĭo not let testdisk write the partition table.
![testdisk none partition testdisk none partition](https://www.filecroco.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/07/testdisk-1.jpg)
Testdisk should find everything and some false positives besides. They are safe and well though, just difficult to access. Removing or destroying the partition table makes it inconvenient to get at your filesysems.
![testdisk none partition testdisk none partition](https://i.stack.imgur.com/2SISR.png)
Your partition table is only a set of pointers to your data. Last edited by avdb on Sat 4:52 am edited 1 time in total If you know other tools I can try, or a possible solution, let me know below. Testdisk is only able to find Microsoft Data on my partition which is clearly not what I'm looking for. I'm pretty sure that there's still a way to get my data back, but I don't have the correct knowledge to do so. Prior to this I already lost all my data on my LVM with LUKS partition because of how difficult it is to make basic changes to Logical Volumes. It contained literally everything important that I had on my computer. My root partition was a LUKS encrypted, with Btrfs as it's filesystem. In the process of doing this it seems like I accidentally wrote the changes to my disk. So I installed the Gparted ISO, rebooted my computer, went looking for my deleted partition but without success.
#TESTDISK NONE PARTITION WINDOWS#
I forgot to check if there was anything I saved on Windows that might've been important to me.
#TESTDISK NONE PARTITION WINDOWS 10#
This morning I was planning on deleting Windows 10 completely for good so I opened up Gparted, deleted the partition, and called it a day. Posted: Fri 2:38 pm Post subject: My root partition disappeared when using testdisk Gentoo Forums Forum Index Other Things Gentoo My root partition disappeared when using testdisk Gentoo Forums :: View topic - My root partition disappeared when using testdisk