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Guide >> Concepts >> Understanding the Partition Recovery Process >> Partition is deleted or Partition Table is damaged
Partition is deleted or Partition Table is damaged
Consider the situations which cause a computer to hang up while booting or hang up due to data loss.
3. What will happen if a partition entry has been deleted?
If it has been deleted, the next two partitions will move one line up in the partition table.
Physical Sector: Cyl 0, Side 0, Sector 1
0000001B0 80 00 ..............€.
0000001C0 41 3F 06 FE 7F 64 7F 32 4E 00 A6 50 09 00 00 00 A?.?d2N.¦P....
0000001D0 41 65 0F FE BF 4A 25 83 57 00 66 61 38 00 00 00 Ae.??J%?W.fa8...
0000001E0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 ................
0000001F0 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 55 AA ..............U?
When trying to boot now, the previous second (FAT) partition becomes the first and the loader will try to boot from it. And if it's not a system partition, the same error messages will appear.
How can recovery software help you in the above-mentioned
scenarios?
- Discover and suggest which partition is to be set as active (FDISK also does this).
- Perform a disk scan of the free space to look for a partition boot sector or remnants of deleted partition information in order to try to reconstruct the Partition Table entry for the deleted partition.
- Perform disk scan on all space to look for partition boot sector or remnants of deleted partition information in order to try to reconstruct the Partition Table entry for the deleted partition.
Why is the partition boot sector so important?
It contains all the necessary information about the partition so that if recovery software finds it, it can reconstruct the partition entry in the Partition Table. (see Partition Boot Sector topic for details).
What would happen if a partition entry had been deleted then recreated with
other parameters and re-formatted?
In this case, a new partition would exist instead of the original one. Everything would work properly with the exception that you could not go back to the original partition if important data is still there. If you've created a MBR, a Partition Table, or a Volume Sectors backup beforehand (as can be done with Active@ Partition Recovery and Active@ UNERASER for example), you can virtually restore it and look for your data (in the case it has not yet been overwritten by new data). Some advanced recovery tools also have an ability to scan disk surfaces and try to reconstruct previously deleted partition information from the pieces of left over information (i.e. perform virtual partition recovery). However it is not guaranteed that you can recover something.
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Data Recovery Tools |
Active@ UNERASER -
a data recovery tool, designed to restore files and directories that have been accidentally deleted or lost.
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Active@ Partition Recovery -
a partition undelete tool, designed to recover lost and deleted partitions.
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Active@ Boot Disk -
a special bootable CD, designed to allow you to make a data backup, recover lost data, erase data, recover windows passwords.
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Disk CleanUp Tools |
Active@ KillDisk -
a disk eraser software for secure formatting of hard drives without the possibility of data recovery.
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Active@ ZDelete -
your privacy protection tool that prevents undesirable people accessing your privately deleted data.
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