On Fri, Feb 25, 2000 at 01:42:58AM -0800, davidturetsky wrote: > I have a bunch of Windows95 files stranded on my old hard drives, not > accessible from windows because the directory (I believe) has been corrupted > > How can I access them directly and copy them off onto the 34gb drive > that came with my new system?
Stencile it "NSA Echelon Data 1998.11.30" and drop it outside your local French consulate. Your data will be retrieved.... Seriously, depending on the type of drive failure(s) and/or the importance of the data, you might want to consider a data retrieval service. If I didn't particularly care about the possiblity of having bad heads munge the rest of the disk, I might do a raw access via 'dd' to build an image file. A successfully created image file should be mountable via a loopback device under Linux -- if the original wasn't compressed via Doublespace or other Windows compression. Loopback mount: # assume file win.img mkdir mountpoint mount -o loop,ro -t vfat win.img mountpoint ...should do it. You'll need to have built loopback filesystem support into your kernel. > If not readily accessible from simple script, does anyone know of some > packages that retrieve files from a corrupted disk? Norton (Symantec) has a set of rescue tools, IIRC. Note again that if your problem is hardware faults, trying to save the data may lose more of it. > TIA > > David -- Karsten M. Self (kmself@ix.netcom.com) What part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? SAS for Linux: http://www.netcom.com/~kmself/SAS/SAS4Linux.html Mailing list: "subscribe sas-linux" to mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]