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Basic File Recovery


NEVER TRY TO SAVE RECOVERED FILES/FOLDERS ON THE SAME PARTITION WHERE THEY RESIDE!!!

Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all your data.

Basic file recovery can be made for deleted files that has resided on an existing partition visible to the operating system. In all other cases, Advanced Data Recovery is required.

To recover deleted files from an existing or recognized partition,

1 Double-click a partition on the R-Linux 's Drives panel to enumerate files on the disk

Click to expand/collapse Other ways to enumerate files

If you try to enumerate files on a hard drive or another object without a valid file system on it, a Double-click a logical disk... message will appear. Select a partition on the object or scan the object.

> R-Linux will change its panel showing the disk's folders/files structure

R-Linux analyzes data on the object and displays all files for which records have been found in the analyzed tables. If files have not been found, that means that their records have been deleted. To find such files, Advanced Data Recovery is required.

Please note that R-Linux shows only those files/folders that match a specified file mask .

Click to expand/collapse R-Linux Main panel

The Log panel will show how many files and folders are on the object, and their size. You may specify which events will be shown in the log pane by setting a log filter .

Note: Metafiles are the file system's internal files invisible to any user, or file system data, which R-Linux represents as files. These files do not contain user data directly. Unless you want to scrutinize a disk file system, do not restore them.

If the Too many files... message appears, you may temporally stop file listing and browse through found files. Then you can resume file listing. You also may skip this file topic and continue. R-Linux will keep information about the entire file structure.

You may also copy the information about folders and files.

2 Select a file/folder to recover

You may select several files/folders in the same parent folder by pressing the Shift button and clicking the objects simultaneously.

Click to expand/collapse Marking multiple files/folders from different parent folders manually:

R-Linux can search for a particular file. Go to the Searching for a File topic for details. If you need to find and mark many files, go to the Find and Mark Multiple Files topic for details.

File content may be previewed before recovery. Go to the Previewing Files topic for details.

If you do not find files that you want to recover:

Sometimes R-Linux can find the files but not the entire file paths to them. It puts such files into the Extra Found Files folder. Try to search for the files there. If that does not help, try to find them by using file search globally on the entire disk. Go to the Searching for a File topic for details

If you still cannot find files that you want to recover but are sure they have existed on the logical disk, you need to use Advanced Data Recovery to find them.

3 Click the Recover or Recover Marked button

Click to expand/collapse Other ways to recover selected files

4 Specify recover options and output folder on the Recover dialog box and click the OK button
Click to enlarge

Recover dialog box

Click to expand/collapse Recover options

If you want to recover multiple files at once, go to the Recover Multiple Files for more information

NEVER TRY TO SAVE RECOVERED FILES/FOLDERS ON THE SAME PARTITION WHERE THEY RESIDE!!!

Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all your data.

If a file to be recovered appears to have an invalid name, a Broken File Name dialog box will appear. You may correct the name and resume file recovery.

Click to enlarge

Broken File Name dialog box

Click to expand/collapse Broken File Name properties

> R-Linux will recover the selected/marked files/folders to the specified folder and show the results in the Log pane

The Recovery progress indicator will show the log and progress of recovery process.

You may change some options during the process of file recovery

Note: R-Linux recovers files from Ext2/3/4FS partitions, but can write them to any local or network disks. R-Linux recovers symlinks as files containing the path to files which symlinks point to.

Opening several disk/partitions in one tab

Searching for a File

Finding Previous File Versions

Previewing Files

File Masks

Regular Expressions

Event Log