If you delete a share in the Lacie Dashboard, would it be possible to recover it with the standalone kernel?
Regards,
Frank
fvdw wrote:the question is if lacie really deletes the associated folder when removing a share.
To be honest I don't know. :dontknow
Just test it and load the standalone kernel you could mount and explore the data partition (sdx2)
fvdw wrote:the question is if lacie really deletes the associated folder when removing a share.
To be honest I don't know. :dontknow
Just test it and load the standalone kernel you could mount and explore the data partition (sdx2)
pacco wrote:I have a RAID5 setup. Mounting the RAID is easy. Can only see the files and folders that are not deleted.
But how do I mount the individual drives of this RAID to check the content?
The question is not applicable. To mount a block device it needs to have a filesystem. A single member of a raid5 system doesn't have a filesystem. The filesystem is put on the whole array, and doesn't 'know' the exposed blockdevice is build of several individual disks.But how do I mount the individual drives of this RAID to check the content?
AFAIK your only option is low-level recovery. A program like PhotoRec can search the raw space of the raid array for files, without help of the filesystem. To be able to do that, the file needs be recognizabe by some specific header. Here is a list of supported file types. Further the tool only can find files, not it's meta data. So no filename, no timestamps, ...There might be some important data on the deleted share to recover.
Mijzelf wrote:The question is not applicable. To mount a block device it needs to have a filesystem. A single member of a raid5 system doesn't have a filesystem. The filesystem is put on the whole array, and doesn't 'know' the exposed blockdevice is build of several individual disks.But how do I mount the individual drives of this RAID to check the content?AFAIK your only option is low-level recovery. A program like PhotoRec can search the raw space of the raid array for files, without help of the filesystem. To be able to do that, the file needs be recognizabe by some specific header. Here is a list of supported file types. Further the tool only can find files, not it's meta data. So no filename, no timestamps, ...There might be some important data on the deleted share to recover.
Yes.pacco wrote:Can I use this PhotoRec software from the standalone kernel?
None of them. They are all compiled for x86/amd64, while your nas runs an Armv5.What version to use? Linux, kernel 2.6.18 or later i386 or Linux, kernel 2.6.18 or later x86_64.
You know how to install ffp. I suggest you to install it on an usb stick (Jocko gave some pointers), and get it running. Then install uwsiteloader. Use it to add my respository. Then you can install photorec:Any tips on how to install it?
slacker -Ui e2fsprogs util-linux libjpeg zlib testlib\&photorec
photorec /dev/md0
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