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Saved by uncleflo on August 9th, 2014.
I have а 2TB "single ext4-formatted partition" HDD. Recently, while working under Windows 7 on the same machine, I have damaged the aforementioned partition. What happened is that while I was trying to recover external USB drive I opened standard windows disk-management tool and it prompted me if I want to make disk1 "active". At that moment I didn't realize that "disk1" is not my USB disk, but the ext4 internal disk. After clicking OK, windows has created 100 MB "system reserved partition" on the disk and left the rest untouched..?
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Saved by uncleflo on August 9th, 2014.
extundelete is a utility that can recover deleted files from an ext3 or ext4 partition. The ext3 and ext4 file systems are the most common default file systems in Linux distributions like Mint, Mageia, or Ubuntu. extundelete uses information stored in the partition's journal to attempt to recover a file that has been deleted from the partition. There is no guarantee that any particular file will be able to be undeleted, so always try to have a good backup system in place, or at least put one in place after recovering your files!
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Saved by uncleflo on August 9th, 2014.
TestDisk is powerful free data recovery software! It was primarily designed to help recover lost partitions and/or make non-booting disks bootable again when these symptoms are caused by faulty software: certain types of viruses or human error (such as accidentally deleting a Partition Table). Partition table recovery using TestDisk is really easy.
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