R-Studio For Mac: User's Manual
R-Studio For Mac: User's Manual
R-Studio For Mac: User's Manual
No part of this User's Manual may be copied, altered, or transferred to, any other media
without written, explicit consent from R-tools Technology Inc..
All brand or product names appearing herein are trademarks or registered trademarks of
their respective holders.
R-tools Technology Inc. has developed this User's Manual to the best of its knowledge,
but does not guarantee that the program will fulfill all the desires of the user.
No warranty is made in regard to specifications or features.
R-tools Technology Inc. retains the right to make alterations to the content of this
Manual without the obligation to inform third parties.
Contents
Table of Contents
I Introduction to R-Studio for Mac
1 R-Studio Features
................................................................................................................................... 1
2 System Requirements
................................................................................................................................... 3
3 Contact Information
...................................................................................................................................
and Technical Support
3
4 R-Studio Main
...................................................................................................................................
Panel
4
5 R-Studio Settings
................................................................................................................................... 8
13
1 Basic File
...................................................................................................................................
Recovery
14
Searching for a File
.......................................................................................................................................................... 21
Finding Previous..........................................................................................................................................................
File Versions
23
Preview ing Files.......................................................................................................................................................... 23
File Masks
.......................................................................................................................................................... 25
Regular Expressions
.......................................................................................................................................................... 26
Event Log
.......................................................................................................................................................... 26
2 Advanced
...................................................................................................................................
Data Recovery
26
Disk Scan
.......................................................................................................................................................... 27
Custom izing File..........................................................................................................................................................
Types
38
Custom izing File..........................................................................................................................................................
Types-I
41
Custom izing File..........................................................................................................................................................
Types-II
43
Regions
.......................................................................................................................................................... 48
Exclusive Regions
.......................................................................................................................................................... 49
Im ages
.......................................................................................................................................................... 50
Object Copy
.......................................................................................................................................................... 54
3 Mass File
...................................................................................................................................
Recovery
59
Find and Mark Multiple
Files
..........................................................................................................................................................
60
Recover Multiple..........................................................................................................................................................
Files
61
File Recovery Lists
.......................................................................................................................................................... 62
4 Volume ...................................................................................................................................
Sets and RAIDs
64
Volum e Sets, Stripe
Sets, and Mirrors
..........................................................................................................................................................
66
Basic RAID 4 and..........................................................................................................................................................
RAID 5 Operations
69
Working w ith RAID6
Presets
..........................................................................................................................................................
71
Working w ith RAID6
(Double Xor) Presets
..........................................................................................................................................................
73
Working w ith RAIDs
w ith Parity Delays
..........................................................................................................................................................
75
Working w ith Advanced
RAID Layouts
..........................................................................................................................................................
78
Nested and Non-Standard
RAID Levels
..........................................................................................................................................................
87
RAID10 (1+0) ......................................................................................................................................................... 87
RAID1E
......................................................................................................................................................... 89
RAID5E
......................................................................................................................................................... 91
RAID5EE
......................................................................................................................................................... 93
RAID6E
......................................................................................................................................................... 95
Various Disk and..........................................................................................................................................................
Volum e Managers
97
Working w ith Window
.........................................................................................................................................................
s Storage Spaces
97
Apple RAIDs ......................................................................................................................................................... 100
Linux LVM/LVM2
......................................................................................................................................................... 101
Finding RAID Param
eters
..........................................................................................................................................................
103
II
5 Data Recovery
...................................................................................................................................
over Network
123
R-Studio Agent .......................................................................................................................................................... 123
R-Studio Agent
.........................................................................................................................................................
for Mac
124
R-Studio Agent
.........................................................................................................................................................
for Window s
125
R-Studio Agent
.........................................................................................................................................................
for Linux
127
Data Recovery over
Netw ork
..........................................................................................................................................................
128
Connecting over
the Internet
..........................................................................................................................................................
129
134
1 Viewing
...................................................................................................................................
and Editing Objects
134
2 Creating
...................................................................................................................................
Custom Patterns
140
3 Pattern...................................................................................................................................
Example I
144
4 Pattern...................................................................................................................................
Example II
147
152
1 IntelligentScan
...................................................................................................................................
Technology
152
2 Data Recovery
...................................................................................................................................
Issues
153
3 Extended
...................................................................................................................................
Information Recovery
155
4 Data Formats
................................................................................................................................... 155
5 Data Recovery
...................................................................................................................................
on HFS/HFS+ File System
155
6 Bad Sectors
................................................................................................................................... 156
7 Memory...................................................................................................................................
Usage
157
8 Forensic
...................................................................................................................................
Mode
157
9 Properties
...................................................................................................................................
Tab
161
168
1 DeepSpar
...................................................................................................................................
Disk Imager
168
VI R-Studio Emergency
169
1 Contact...................................................................................................................................
Informaiton and Technical Support
170
2 Installing
...................................................................................................................................
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator
170
3 Creating
...................................................................................................................................
Startup Disks
170
4 R-Studio
...................................................................................................................................
Emergency Operation
176
Starting a Com puter
w ith the R-Studio Em ergency Startup Disks
..........................................................................................................................................................
176
File Recovery .......................................................................................................................................................... 177
Searching for a..........................................................................................................................................................
File
177
Disk Scan
.......................................................................................................................................................... 178
Disk Im ages .......................................................................................................................................................... 179
5 R-Studio
...................................................................................................................................
Emergency Technical Information
179
Contents
III
Properties and..........................................................................................................................................................
Text/Hexadecim al View er
180
Netw ork Drives.......................................................................................................................................................... 180
Log
.......................................................................................................................................................... 180
6 R-Studio
...................................................................................................................................
Emergency Hardware Compatibility List
181
186
1 Contact...................................................................................................................................
Information and Technical Support
186
2 Installing
...................................................................................................................................
R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator
186
3 Creating
...................................................................................................................................
Startup Disks
186
4 Starting...................................................................................................................................
a Computer with the R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Disk
192
5 R-Studio
...................................................................................................................................
Agent Emergency Hardware Compatibility List
195
Disk Controllers
.......................................................................................................................................................... 195
Netw ork Cards.......................................................................................................................................................... 204
Index
217
R-Studio is a family of powerful and cost-effective undelete and data recovery software. Empowered by new
unique data recovery technologies, it is the most comprehensive data recovery solution for recovering files from
from FAT12/16/32, NTFS, exFAT, NTFS5 (created or updated by Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008/7/8), ReFS
(Resilient File System, a new local file system Microsoft has introduced in its Windows 2012 Server. ), HFS/HFS
+ (Macintosh), Little and Big Endian variants of UFS1/UFS2 (FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD/Solaris), Ext2/3/4FS
(Linux), and exFAT partitions . It functions on local and network disks, even if such partitions are formatted,
damaged or deleted. Flexible parameter settings give you absolute control over the data recovery.
R-Studio Features
System Requirements
Contact Information and Technical Support
Data Recovery Using R-Studio
Basic File Recovery
Advanced Data Recovery
Mass File Recovery
Volume Sets and RAIDs
Data Recovery over Network
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
Technical Information and Troubleshooting
Working with the Third-Party Hardware
R-Studio Emergency
R-Studio Agent Emergency
1.1
R-Studio Features
R-Studio is a family of file restoring utilities. It recovers files both on local disks, even if their partition structures
are damaged. A unique IntelligentScan technology and flexible parameter settings give you real control over the
fastest data recovery ever seen.
R-Studio features:
Host OS: OS X Yosemite, Mavericks 10.9, Mountain Lion 10.8, Lion 10.7, Snow Leopard 10.6, Mac OS
10.4 Tiger, Mac OS Server 10.5 Tiger, Mac OS 10.5 Leopard and Mac OS Server 10.5 Leopard running
on a computer with Intel, PowerPC G5 or PowerPC G4 processors.
Remotely recovers data over network. Data can be recovered on network computers running Win9x, ME,
NT, 2000, XP, or Linux and some other UNIX OS.
Supported file systems: FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, NTFS, NTFS5 (created and updated by Win2000 or
XP), exFAT, ReFS file system (Resilient File System), a new local file system Microsoft has introduced in its
Windows 2012 Server, Ext2/3/4FS (created by Linux or other OS), HFS, HFS+, HFSX, and UFS1,
UFS2, UFS BigEndian (used by the FreeBSD, OpenBSD, and NetBSD operating systems).
Please note, that when a file is being deleted on the HFS, HFS+, HFSX file systems, the computer
completely removes all system information on it, and there is no way to recover the deleted file except by
using the Extra Search for Known File Types option. Nevertheless, R-Studio is able to read existing files
from HFS, HFS+, and HFSX disks.
Support for known file types. R-Studio searches for files with known typical features of their structures
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allowing the user to search for files on devices with unknown files systems, including an HD, CD, DVD,
floppy disk, Compact Flash Card, USB drive, ZIP drive, Memory Sticks, and other removable media.
Scan process visualization. While scanning an object, R-Studio graphically shows items that have been
found, including files of known types, FAT and NTFS MFT records, boot records, etc.
Mass file recovery support.
Support for file recovery lists - lists of files that can be exported from R-Studio, manually edited, and then
loaded back. Files from such lists will be automatically marked for recovery.
Dynamic disk support.
APM, Basic and GPT support. R-Studio supports all three partition schemes used to define the low-level
organization of data on disks formatted for use with Macintosh computers.
Software RAID, volume set, and stripe set support. Support for RAID 6, RAID 5, and RAID 4 layouts.
Support for custom RAID layouts. Parameters like block size and order, offsets, and even the number of
stripe blocks can be explicitly specified. Custom RAID configurations can be saved.
Support for Windows Storage Spaces, created by Windows 8/8.1 and Windows 10.
Support for software Apple software RAIDs
Support for Linux LVM/LVM2
RAID consistency check (check for valid data parity values).
Hardware RAID, volume set, and stripe set support.
Automatic RAID parameter recognition.
Reverse RAIDs: A technique that decomposes real disk objects into virtual RAIDs. Then those components
of reverse RAID scan be processed like real objects. They can be viewed, edited, imaged, copied to
physical drives, etc. This technique also can re-construct data on the real parents of a virtual RAID. For
example, it becomes possible to re-construct data on a missing disk.
Creates image files for an entire hard drive, logical disk, or its part. Such image files can be processed like
regular disks. Images can be either simple exact object copies (Plain images) compatible with the previous
versions of R-Studio, or compressed images that can be compressed, split into several parts, and
password-protected. Such images are fully compatible with the images created by R-Drive Image, but
incompatible with the previous versions of R-Studio.
Advanced object copy. In addition to byte to byte copy of any object visible in the Drives panel, smart copy
of partitions and hard drives is available.
Recovers files on damaged or deleted partitions.
Recovers compressed files (NTFS, NTFS5).
Recovers encrypted files (NTFS5).
Recovers alternative data streams (NTFS, NTFS5).
Recognizes localized names.
Recovered files can be saved on any (including network) disks visible by the host operating system.
A hexadecimal disk and file editor supporting NTFS file non-resident attribute editing.
Patterns (or templates) in the hexadecimal editor allowing for parsing the data according to specific data
structure. Such patterns may be custom-created.
File preview. Most of the graphic file types can be previewed to estimate recovery chances.
Enhanced remote host scanning procedure. In the new R-Studio network versions, data are analyzed on the
remote host rather than on the home host, thereby the speed of recovery procedure greatly increases.
Recovered files may be saved on a disk on a connected remote computer rather than be transferred over
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network to the local one. Saving recovered files on a remote computer may be useful when the remote
computer has a healthy disk because you do not have to transfer files over network. It may be an external
USB hard drive, for example.
Forensic mode. (For the Technician version only).
Support for S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) attribute monitoring.
Support for third-party hardware. (For the Technician version only).
R-Studio Emergency*. The R-Studio Emergency version starts from a floppy or compact disk when it is
necessary to recover data on a computer, on which Windows cannot start up because its system files are
corrupted or deleted.
*The R-Studio Emergency is a part of the R-Studio software package. When you buy an R-Studio single
license you may run the R-Studio Emergency or/and install the R-Studio Windows version on one PC only
and you may not transfer the licensed software to another PC.
R-Studio recovers files:
That have been removed without Trash, or when Trash has been emptied;
Removed by virus attack or power failure;
After the partition with the files was reformatted, even for different file system;
When the partition structure on a hard drive was changed or damaged. In this case, R-Studio can scan the
drive trying to find previously existed partitions and recover files from found partitions.
From disks with bad sectors. In this case, R-Studio can first copy the entire disk or its part into an image file
and then process such image file.
R-Studio can create image files for an entire hard drive, logical disk, or its part. Such image files can be
processed like regular disks. Images are very useful if there is a risk of total data loss due to hardware
malfunction. If bad blocks are constantly appearing on a hard drive, the only way to save the data is to
immediately create an image of that drive. All data search, scan and recovery can be done from this image.
To learn more about the IntelligentScan technology, go to the IntelligentScan topic .
1.2
System Requirements
1.3
1.4
panel:
You can select an object by clicking on it.
Drives
Properties
tab:
This tab shows the properties of an object selected on the Drives panel.
Depending on the selected object, information on this Properties tab may vary.
The Properties tab names and values are described in detail on the Properties tab topic.
Log window:
S.M.A.R.T. Info for a Hard Drive
When a hard drive is selected on the R-Studio main panel, an additional S.M.A.R.T. tab will appear. You may
view the hardware conditions of the drive.
S.M.A.R.T. (Self-Monitoring, Analysis and Reporting Technology) is a technology widely-used in hard drives
and solid-state devices that monitors their reliability conditions to predict possible hardware failures.
S.M.A.R.T. panel
You may select the language of R-Studio main panel. To do so, select an available language on Change
Language on the Help menu
Panel view options
Toolbar
Select/clear Toolbar on the View menu
Toolbar Button Text Select/clear Toolbar Button Text on the View menu
Status bar
Select/clear Status bar on the View menu
Device pane
Select/clear Device View on the View menu
Properties pane
Select/clear Properties View on the View menu
The Log panel
Select/clear Event Log on the View menu
Search results
Select/clear Find results on the View menu
If you have several tabs in the right pane, you may easily switch to any of the tab by selecting the View menu
Properties Tab
to view the Properties tab
Scan Information
to view the Scan Information Tab tab
Tab
Parents Tab
Properties
Connect to Remote
Remove
You may select the units in which object's start and size are displayed
To select the units
1
Depending on the task R-Studio performs, its panel may vary. Those panels are described in appropriate topics.
The Properties tab names and values are described in detail on the Properties tab topic.
The general settings can be set on the Settings dialog box.
R-Studio has two operation modes:
File search
1.5
R-Studio Settings
You may specify some global setting for R-Studio on the Settings dialog box. You may reach it by selecting
Preferences on the R-Studio menu.
Main
Main dialog box
Main settings
System Options
Enable Write
Debug Mode
If this check box is selected, R-Studio enables you to write any changes
made in the Text/hexadecimal editor.
If this check box is selected, R-Studio displays an additional command
Create FS Snapshot on the contextual menu for an object with a file system.
An FS Snapshot contains system data for the file system only (file descriptions
without file contents). If a problem appears, this snapshot can be sent to RStudio technical support to identify the problem. This option greatly slows RStudio.
Notifications
Reset all hidden notifications
Reset
Clicking this button will make all notification messages you hid appear again.
Specifies the path and name for an external file in which you may describe
your own known file types. See Customizing File Types for details. You
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need to re-start R-Studio or click the Reload User's File Types button on the
Known File Types tab for the new file to take effect.
User's RAID layouts
File name
Specifies the path and name for an external file in which you may describe
your own customized RAID layout. See Description File for RAID
Configurations for details.
HexView templates
path
Location
Specifies the path for pattern description files for Text/Hexadecimal editor.
File Systems
File Systems dialog box
Log options
Maximum
messages in the
Event Log
10
Logging
Save log to file
If this checkbox is selected, R-Studio writes its log into a log file specified in the File
name field.
File name
Specifies the file name of the log file. If that file already exists, the data will be appended to
that file.
Type
Files
File System
Partition
Recover
Disk
Network
Severity
Error
Warning
Information
Success
If this checkbox is selected, R-Studio adds error messages into its log.
If this checkbox is selected, R-Studio adds warning messages into its log.
If this checkbox is selected, R-Studio adds information messages into its log.
If this checkbox is selected,, R-Studio adds success messages into its log.
NEVER WRITE A LOG FILE ON THE DISK FROM WHICH YOU RECOVER DATA!!!
Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all your data.
Known File Types
Known File Types dialog box
You may specify which Known File Types will be enabled/disabled by default. You may also specify know
file types to search for during a specific scan session on the Scan dialog box.
11
Click this button to reset the settings to the previous state. Active until the Apply
button is clicked.
Click this button to select all file types in the list.
Click this button to clear all file types in the list except some predefined ones.
Click this button to apply new file types after the user's file types file has been
changes from the Main tab.
Click this button to add a new customer's Known File Type, or to edit already
existing ones. See the Customizing File Types help page for more details
Select All
Clear All
Bad Sectors
Bad Sectors dialog box
Specifies how many times R-Studio will try to read a bad sector. You may
specify this parameter for each drive separately on the Properties tab.
R-Studio treats bad sectors in the following way:
It reads a certain part of disk (predefined by Windows) and
If Default read attempts is set to 0, the entire part with bad sectors will be
filled with the specified pattern.
If Default read attempts is set to a non-zero value, R-Studio reads again that
part sector by sector, repeating the attempts the specified number of times.
If R-Studio still cannot read a bad sector, it fills the sectors with the
specified pattern. In this case only the bad sectors will be filled with the
pattern, but that extremely slows the disk read process.
For example, if you set Default read attempts to 1, a bad sector will be read 2
times.
Click this button to reset I/O Tries for all drives to the default value.
Specifies a pattern R-Studio will use to fill bad sectors in files to recover, in
images, or when showing data in the Text/Hexadecimal Editor. You may
specify the pattern either in the ANSI or Hex data format.
Note: R-Studio will never ever try to write anything on the disk from which
12
These settings control how much memory R-Studio uses for its work. They help preventing R-Studio from
locking when trying to perform very memory-consuming tasks like scanning large disks or processing file
systems with a lot of files.
Memory Usage settings
Disable memory control
13
II
Recovery of files that have resided on a data disk with a damaged file system, or on a previously
deleted or re-formatted partition
If the file system on such logical disk is damaged, the operating system does not see that logical disk as a
partition without a valid file system. Such partition should be previously scanned. Also, it should be scanned if
you want to recover data on a previously deleted or re-formatted partition.
When the partition is scanned, a number of recognized partitions will appear. R-Studio shows them in
different colors depending on which elements of the partition have been found.
An existing logical disk or partition
Both boot records and file entries are found for this partition
Only file entries are found for this partition
Only boot records are found for this partition
Empty space on the object
Files that have been found using scan for known file types.
Although such recognized partitions are virtual objects, files can be searched for and recovered from
recognized partitions as from real logical disks using Basic File Recovery.
To successfully recover files from a recognized partition, it is necessary to find a right one which corresponds
to the real logical disk on which the files resided. No strict rules can be applied to that, but the following
considerations should be taken into account:
If you are going to recover files from a disk with a damaged file system, most likely the right recognized
partition will be a green one.
If you are going to recover files from a previously deleted or re-formatted partition, most likely the
right recognized partition will be a yellow one.
Also always check the recognized partition's file system, start point, and size. They should be the same for
the recognized partition and real logical disk/partition. When in doubt, try to preview a couple of files from
the recognized partition. If the files are seen correctly, this is the right partition.
R-Studio Features
Contact Information and Technical Support
Basic File Recovery
Advanced Data Recovery
Mass File Recovery
Volume Sets and RAIDs
Data Recovery over Network
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
Technical Information and Troubleshooting
R-Studio Emergency
R-Studio Agent Emergency
2.1
14
NEVER TRY TO SAVE RECOVERED FILES/FOLDERS TO THE SAME LOGICAL DISK WHERE
THEY RESIDE!!!
Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all of your data.
Double-click a logical disk on the R-Studio's Drives panel to enumerate files on the disk
Other ways to enumerate files
Select the disk and click the Open Drive Files button,
or
Control-click the selected disk and select Open Drive Files on the contextual menu,
or
Select Open Drive Files on the Drive menu
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 logical disk on the object or scan the object.
2
R-Studio will change its panel showing the disk's folders/files structure
R-Studio analyzes data on the object and displays all files which records have been found in the analyzed
tables. Then deleted files, which records still remain, can be recovered. 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-Studio shows only those files/folders that match a specified file mask .
15
Folders
16
panel
Deleted folder
Marked folder (all child
objects in this folder are
marked)
Partially marked folder
(some child objects in
this folder are marked)
Cross-linked deleted
folder (A FAT folder
containing data which
also belongs to other
FAT folders.)
Questionable deleted
folder (A FAT folder
found by R-Studio, but
with apparently invalid
content.)
Files
panel:
Deleted file:
Marked deleted file
Selected deleted file
You may also arrange the data as required: by their extensions, creation/modification time, or as a real file
structure
See Find and Mark Multiple Files for more details
Find Results panel
17
Click this button to find the next object specified in the Find/Mark
dialog box.
Find Previous
Click this button to find the previous object specified in the Find/Mark
dialog box.
File Mask
You may select several files/folders in the same parent folder by pressing the Shift button and clicking the
objects simultaneously.
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18
Mark a file/folder to recover by clicking the box left to the object, or select Mark on the contextual menu.
You may mark several files/folders in different parent folders. You may mark all objects in the folder by
selecting Mark All on the Tools or contextual menu. To unmark an object, click the box left to the object
once more or select Unmark on the contextual menu. You may unmark all objects in the folder by selecting
Unmark All on the Tools or contextual menu.
The Log panel will show how many files and folders you have marked, and their total size.
R-Studio 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-Studio 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.
4
Control-click the selected file/folder and select Recover or Recover Marked on the contextual menu,
or
Select Recover or Recover Marked on the File menu
5
Specify recover options and output folder on the Recover dialog box and click the OK button
Recover dialog box
If you have another computer connected to R-Studio over network, the Recover dialog box will be slightly
different. See Data recovery over network for details.
Recover options
Condense successful
restoration events:
19
which all files to recover reside starting from the common topmost folder.
Restore folder structure:
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers the entire path to the
selected object.
Restore from root
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers the entire path to the
selected object starting from the root folder of the disk.
Recover metafiles
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers disk metafiles. Metafiles
are the file system's internal files invisible to any user, or file system data,
which R-Studio represents as files. These files do not contain user data
directly. Unless you want to scrutinize a disk file system, do not restore
them.
Ignore file mask:
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers all content of a selected
folder, ignoring specified File Mask.
Recover alternative data
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers alternative data streams
streams:
for file systems that support them. Has no effect on FAT files. See
Extended Information Recovery for the NTFS file system, and Data
Recovery on HFS/HFS+ File System for the Mac computers.
Recover security:
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers security attributes for
NTFS files. Has no effect on FAT files.
Recover extended attributes:
If this check box is selected, R-Studio recovers extended (HPFS) file
attributes.
Remove hidden attributes
If this check box is selected, R-Studio will remove the Hidden and
System attributes from recovered files enabling the user to see them.
Recover real folders structure
Enabled when the files are sorted by their extensions or date. See Find
and Mark Multiple Files for details. If this check box is selected, RStudio recovers the real folders/files structure on the disk rather than that
of sorted files.
Skip files with bad sectors
If this check box is selected, R-Studio skips files with bad sectors and
displays their list on the Files with bad sectors dialog box when the
recovery has been completed. You may separately decide later what to
do with those files. See Bad sectors for details.
If this check box is cleared, R-Studio tries to read those sectors several
times (specified on the Settings/Bad Sectors dialog box), and, if fails,
fills bad sectors in the recovered file with the pattern specified on the
same box. Information about such files will appear in the Log.
Mass File Recovery Options
Specifies options for mass file recovery
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 TO THE SAME LOGICAL DISK WHERE
THEY RESIDE!!!
Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all of 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.
20
New name
>
R-Studio 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.
Recovery progress indicator
Note: R-Studio recovers files from Ext2FS partitions, but writes it to FAT or NTFS local disks. Or you
may write such files to network disks. R-Studio successfully recovers files from Ext2FS partitions except its
security attributes. R-Studio recovers symlinks as files containing the path to files which symlinks point to.
Searching for a File
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21
Specify a file to be found and its options on the Find dialog box, and click the OK button
Find/Mark options
You may specify how to treat specified strings. Please note that R-Studio stores previously entered
search strings.
All Files
If this option is selected, R-Studio applies Advanced Options to all files.
File Extensions
If this option is selected, R-Studio treats specified strings as file extensions
File Masks
If this option is selected, R-Studio treats specified strings as file masks
Regular
If this option is selected, R-Studio treats specified strings as regular expressions
Expressions
Options
Match case
Look in
Deleted files
Existing files
Find/Mark mode
22
Specifies where R-Studio searches for, and marks, files. It can look for them on the
Entire disk, From current folder, In the Current folder and subfolders, and in the Current
folder only. If From current folder is selected, you may also specify the Direction for the
search from the current position in the current folder.
If this check box is selected, R-Studio makes a search among deleted files/folders.
If this check box is selected, R-Studio makes a search among existing files/folders.
Specifies what R-Studio does with the found files. It may:
Find all matched files. R-Studio searches for all matched files. The search results
appear on the Find Results panel.
Find first matched file. R-Studio stops at the first found file.
Mark matched files. R-Studio marks all found files.
Unmark matched files. R-Studio unmarks all found files.
Please note, that when performing a new find and mark/unmark task, R-Studio does
not takes into consideration the previous marked/unmarked state of files. For example,
if you first mark all doc files, and then all txt files, all doc files remain marked, too. To
unmark them, you should specify doc once again and select Unmark matched files.
Look at
Files
Folders
Direction
Advanced Options
Size from/up to
File Id
Date
>
control-click a folder and select Find Next or Find Previous on the contextual menu
or
Select a folder and select Find Next or Find Previous on the Tools menu
To find all files and show them on the Find Results panel,
*
or
select Find all on the Tools menu
>
R-Studio will show the found files on the Find Results panel
You may do the following actions on the found files:
Recover, Mark, Preview
R-Tools Technology Inc.
23
by control-clicking the found file and selecting the appropriate item in the contextual menu.
2.1.2
Finding Previous File Versions
R-Studio can find previous versions of files. It searches for them in the file's current folder and in Extra Found
Files.
File versions are searched for using file size. If the size of a files is within 10% of the original filesize, the following
conditions are checked:
Conditions
Legend
File name
N
File extension
E
Recognized file type
T
To search for previous file versions,
1
Control-click the file and select Find Previous Versions of the File on the contextual menu
This technique can be used to find deleted original files after attacks of file encrypting viruses.
2.1.3
Previewing Files
R-Studio has a built-in file previewer that allows you to preview both existing and deleted files. You may use this
feature to estimate recovery or a file to be recovered.
To preview a file
1
Control-click a file to preview on the Files panel and select Preview on the contextual menu
Other ways to preview the file
Select the file on the Files panel and
or
Select the file on the Files panel and select Preview on the File menu
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Compression
Rle
Rle
25
TrueVision Targa
!Windows Bitmap
Wireless Bitmap (level 0)
X11 BitMap
X11 PixMap
Zsoft Publisher's Paintbrush
2.1.4
File Masks
Rle
Rle 4 & 8 bits
Rle
R-Studio shows only those files/folders that match the specified file mask. File mask affects files/folders that are
processed by the Recover and Find commands.
To specify a file mask,
1
or
Select the folder and select File Mask on the Tools menu
2
Specify the file mask on the File mask dialog box and click the OK button
Mask dialog box
Advanced Options
Size from/up to
Date
>
R-Studio will show only those files that match the specified file masks
2.1.5
26
Regular Expressions
Regular expression is a notation for patterns of text, as opposed to exact strings of characters. The notation uses
literal characters and metacharacters. Every character which does not have special meaning in the regularexpression syntax is a literal character and matches an occurrence of that character. For example, letters and
numbers are literal characters. A metacharacter is a symbol with special meaning (an operator or delimiter) in the
regular-expression syntax.
.
Wildcard: any character
*
Repeat: zero or more occurrences of previous character or class
^
Line position: beginning of line
$
Line position: end of line
[class]
Character class: any character in the set
[^class]
Inverse class: any character not in the set
[x-y]
Range: any characters within the specified range
\x
Escape: literal use of metacharacter x
\<xyz
Word position: beginning of the word
xyz\>
Word position: end of the word
For example, the following regular expression .* matches any string of characters, ^a matches any string
beginning with character a.
2.1.6
Event Log
R-Studio logs and displays events in the Log panel. You may set a Log filter to display only needed information
and to write it to a log file. You may specify the log settings on the Settings dialog box.
You may clear or save the log.
R-Studio logs and displays events in the Log panel. You may set a Log filter to display only needed information
and to write it to a log file. You may specify the log settings on the Settings dialog box.
You may clear or save the log
To clear the log,
*
Control-click the Log panel and select Clear Log on the contextual menu.
Control-click the Log panel and select Save Log to File on the contextual menu.
2.2
27
2.2.1
Disk Scan
In order to completely analyze data structure on an object, it must be scanned. Any object on the Drives panel
can be scanned. In addition, you may create a region to scan only a part of an object. The Regions topic
explains how to create and work with regions.
You may select scan area and some other scan parameters. Scan information may be saved to a file and later this
file may be opened.
Attention: Scanning large areas may be a very lengthy process!
NEVER TRY TO SAVE SCAN INFORMATION TO THE OBJECT BEING SCANNED!!!
Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all of your data.
To scan an object
1
Control-click the selected disk and select Scan on the contextual menu,
or
Select Scan on the Drive menu
3
Specify the required parameters on the Scan dialog box and click the Scan button
Scan dialog box
Scan options
Disk Size:
File Systems:
28
sectors
Specifies the file systems which objects are to be searched for.
Current version supports: FAT, NTFS, exFAT, ReFS, Ext2FS/3FS, HFS, and UFS
file systems.
Please note that if you need to scan an HFS, HFS+, or HFSX disk, always enable
the Extra search for Known File Types option. This is very important because when files
are being deleted on the HFS, HFS+, HFSX file systems, the computer completely
removes all system information on them, and there is no way to recover the deleted
files except by using the Extra Search for Known File Types option.
Enables search for Known File Types.
If this checkbox is selected, R-Studio will save scan information to a specified file.
Later this file may be opened. Please note, that this option does not save actual disk
data, only information on disk data structure gathered during disk scan.
If this option is selected, R-Studio will show only scan progress.
If this option is selected, R-Studio will show graphic representation on objects found
during scan.
If this option is selected, R-Studio will not show the Scan Information tab during
scan.
Buttons
Scan
Advanced
Known File
Types...
Cancel
Starts scanning
Activates advanced scan options
Selects file types that R-Studio will recognize during the disk scan.
Closes the dialog box
If a remote computer is connected for Data Recovery over Network, the Save Scan Information File
dialog box will appear when you select a place to store scan info. You may save it to the local or remote
computer.
Using such
29
information, R-Studio can obtain more information about data/file structure on the object being scanned. By
default, R-Studio tries to recognize the default list of supported file types specified on the Known File Types
tab of the Settings panel, greatly increasing time required for the scan. You may reduce it by selecting only
those file types that you need. Click the Known File Types... button and select the required file types on the
File Types dialog box. These selections will be applied to that scan session only.
File Types dialog box
Click this button to set the current list of selected file types as default values.
Click this button to revert the default settings specified on the Known File Types tab
of the Settings panel.
Click this button to select all file types in the list.
Click this button to clear all file types in the list except some predefined ones.
* By default, files of this type are not selected. If necessary, select them manually
Document
AbiWord
Adobe PDF
Final Draft
Document: .abw
document: .pdf
Document: .fdr
Garmin MapSource
GNU Info
HTML
data: .mps
Document: .info
Document: .html
Lotus Organizer
Lotus Word Pro
Microsoft Money
Report: .rep
Document: .lwp
Data: .mny
Microsoft OneNote
Microsoft Pocket
Microsoft PowerPoint
section file: .one
Streets Map File: .mps 2007 XML
Document*: .pptx
Microsoft Reader
Microsoft Reader
Microsoft Word 2007
eBook: .lit
eBook
XML
annotations: .ebo
Document*: .docx
Microsoft Word2
Microsoft WordPad
OLE Storage
Document: .doc
Document: .wri
PostScript
QuickBooks Backup
QuickBooks Primary
document:*.ps
File: *.qbb
Data File: *.qbw
Rich Text
TEX Document: .tex
Text Document: .txt
R-Tools Technology Inc.
FrameMaker
Document: .fm
Lotus AMI Pro
Document: .sam
Microsoft Office Open
XML Document *
Microsoft PowerPoint
Document*: .ppt
Microsoft Word
Document*: .doc
OpenDocument
Document
Quicken Data: *.qdf
TurboTax return
Document: .rtf
Unicode
Word for Macintosh
Document: .txt
Document: .mcw
Document: Spreadsheet
Lotus Spreadsheet: .wks Lotus3
Spreadsheet: .wk3
WordPerfect
Document: .doc
30
file:.tax
XML Document: .xml
Microsoft Excel2
Spreadsheet: .xls
Document: Database
Data Interchange Format
file: .dif
Microsoft Excel3/4
Spreadsheet: .xls
dBase III
Database: .dbf
Microsoft Access
Database: .mdb
Microsoft SQL
Log: .ldf
Internet-related files
Compiled HTML
file: .chm
Microsoft Linker
Database: .lk
MySQL
Database: .myi
Microsoft Program
Database: .pdb
Omnis Studio
Database: .df1
Microsoft OutLook
Personal Folder: .pst
Outlook Express
Messages: .dbx
Windows Address
Book: .wab
Microsoft Outlook/
Inbox offline
folder: .ost
The Bat! Address
book: .abd
XML document
(Unicode): .xml
Adobe Printer
Font: .pfm
MyTest Font: .mtf
Windows System
Font: .fon
Adobe InDesign
File: .indd
ArcView Shape:.shp
Adobe Photoshop
Image: .psd
AutoCAD Binary
Image: .dxf
Autodesc Animator
Pro color map: .col
Bentley MicroStation
CAD Drawing: .dgn
Canon RAW graphics
Graphics/Picture
3D XML file: .3dxml
Agfa/Matrix Scodl
Image: .scd
AutoCAD
Drawing: .dwg
Autodesc Animator Pro
Image: .pic
BMF Image: .bmf
Autodesc Animator
Image: .pic
AVHRR Satellite
Image: .sst
Canon RAW graphics
Microsoft Excel
Document*: .xls
31
file: .crw
CompuServe GIF
Image: .gif
CorelDraw CMX
Image: .cmx
Enhanced MetaFile
Image: .emf
Freehand (MX)
Database: .fh10
Graphics Workshop for
Windows
Thumbnail: .thn
HP Command
Language Image: .pcl
iPhoto Image: .attr
file*: .cr2
ComputerEyes Raw
Image: .ce1
CorelDraw Image: .cdr
Epson Stylus
Image: .prn
GEM Raster
Image: .img
Gridded Binary
Image: .grb
HP Raster Image: .rtl
Jovian Logic Image: .vi
file: .crw
Continous Edge
Graphic Image: .ceg
Cubicomp Picture
Maker Image
Erdas LAN/GIS
Image: .lan
GEM VDI
Image: .gdi
Hitachi Raster
Image: .hrf
HSI JPEG
Image: .hsi
JPEG 2000: .jp2
Microsoft Paint
Image: .msp
PaintShop Pro
Image: .psp
Pictor PC Paint
Image: .pic
PPM Image: .ppm
Minolta RAW
image: .mrw
PaperPort Image: .max
Kodak PhotoCD
Image: .pcd
Macintosh Paint
Image: .mac
Nikon RAW
image*: .nef
PBM Image: .pbm
PM Image: .pm
QuickDraw 3D
Metafile: .3dmf
Sketch Image: .sk
QuarkXpress
Database: .qxp
RenderMan
Image: .rib
SmartDraw file: .sdr
TI Image: .92i
Windows Animated
cursor: .ani
Windows icon: .ico
Windows Bitmap
Image: .bmp
Windows MetaFile
Image: .wmf
Macintosh PICT
Image: .pct
Olympus RAW
image: .orf
PGM Image: .pgm
X Window Dump
Image: .xwd
ZSoft PCX
Image: .pcx
32
DiamondWare
Sound: .dwd
Extended M3U
playlist: .m3u
MIDI Instrument
definition: .idf
MPEG Layer I
Audio: .mpg
Musepack Audio: .mpc
Digital Speech
File: .dss
FLAC Audio
Creative Voice
File: .voc
EA ASF/MUS
Audio: .asf
Liquid Audio: .la1
MPEG Layer II
Audio*: .mp2
Next/Sun Sound: .au
Adobe Filmstrip
Animation: .fsf
BCS Video: .bcs
DeluxePaint
Animation: .anm
Eyemail Video: .eye
Intel Indeo Video
File: .ivf
MPEG Video: .mpg
Autodesk
Animator: .fli
Director Video: .dcr
OptimFROG
Audio: .ofr
Sony OpenMG
Audio: .oma
WavPack Audio: .wv
Windows WAVE
Sound: .wav
33
Video: .cpk
SMJPEG Video: .mjpg
Vivo streaming
Video: .viv
Windows Media
Video: .wmv
Video: .swf
VideoCD
MPEG: .dat
VP6 encoded
Video: .vp6
InstallShield archive
LHA/LZARK archive:
*.lzh
LZSH archive
Microsoft Cabinet
archive: .cab
PAKLEO archive: .pll Pack archive *
Microsoft Compress 6
archive
Quantum archive *: .ark Quark archive
ReSOF archive: .sof
SQZ archive: .sqz
UFA archive: .ufa
WIN-Freeze
archive*: .ice
YBS archive: .ybs
Apple Safari Web
Archive: .webarchive
WinImage Archive:
*.imz
R-Tools Technology Inc.
Microsoft Compress 5
archive
QFC archive: .qfc
SCO archive *
TAR archive: .tar
UltraCrypt 2
archive: .ue2
YAC archive: .yc
Executable/Library/DLL
DOS Style
ELF Executable
Executable: .exe
(UNIX)
Java Bytecode: .class
Novell NetWare
executable: .nlm
Win32
Windows OCX
Executable*: .exe
File: .ocx
Development files
Borland Delphi 6
Borland Turbo Pascal
Library: .dcu
compiled Unit: .tpu
Library: .lib
Microsoft .NET XML
Resource
template: .resx
Microsoft Precompiled
Microsoft Visual C++
header: .pch
Database: .mdp
Microsoft Program
Microsoft Visual C++
database
project
OMF Object
VisualBasic
library: .lib
Database: .vbp
Other file types
ABBYY Lingvo
File Crypt file: .rzx
dictionary: .lsd
OziExplorer Map
RegEdit file: .reg
data:.map
Windows Clipboard
Windows Color
file: .clp
Profile: .icm
Windows Password
Windows Policy
file: .pwl
file: .pol
Windows shortcut: .lnk WinHelp: .hlp
RDOFF executable
COM Type
Library: .tlb
Microsoft ClassWizard
file: .clw
Delphi 7 Compiled
Unit: .dcu
Microsoft Linker
database
Kaspersky Anti-virus
data base: .avc
RegEdit file
(UNICODE): .reg
Windows Minidump
NOD32 Antivirus
Update file: .nup
Windows Backup
File: .bkf
Windows National
locale: .nls
Windows Registry
hive: .hiv
Windows Registry
file: .dat
WinHelp
Contents: .cnt
Unreal Package
PolySpace results
Kaspersky Anti-Virus
database
Fallout 3 save game
WinXP Prefetch file
34
Kaspersky Anti-Virus
signature base
ArtMoney Table file
PlayStation 3 Theme
XPCOM Type Library
MySQL Database
Dictionary
Audacity audio
D-LIB bytecode
OS/2 Icon
iOS Package
35
Binary
Note: Using scan for Known File Types, R-Studio can successfully recover only un-fragmented files.
You may also specify your own file types for scanning. See Customizing File Types for details. Userdefined file types precede over built-in ones, if their definitions overlap.
You may set the defaults for known file types on the R-Studio Settings.
R-Studio starts scanning the object, and its panel will show information about new found objects:
R-Studio Main panel
36
The Log pane will show scan progress. Scan may be stopped by clicking the Stop button on the toolbar.
Later the scan process may be resumed with different scan parameters.
To see the information about a newly found object, simply click it on the Drives panel. Click this link to see
the information about the object Recognized3.
When an object is scanned, a number of Recognized partitions will appear. R-Studio shows them in different
colors depending on which elements of the partition have been found.
R-Tools Technology Inc.
37
If the selected object has been completely scanned, you may rescan it either completely or with new scan
parameters. If the selected object has been scanned partially, you may scan the rest of the object, ignore the
existing scan information and scan the entire object, or specify scan parameters manually.
R-Studio accumulates the information from successive scans and keeps track of changes in this information
obtained from different scans.
You may make several scans of successive or overlapping areas. Click the Advanced button, specify an offset
and size for a new area to scan on the Advanced Scan dialog box and click the Add button. You may specify
and add several scan areas. You may select which areas should be scanned. Selected scan areas can be merged.
Control-click a necessary area and select either Merge Down, Merge Down All, and Merge Selected.
Advanced Scan dialog box
Scan information may be saved to a file. Previously saved scan information may be loaded.
To save scan information
1
Select Save Scan Information on the Drive or contextual menu and save the scan information in a file
38
If a remote computer is connected for Data Recovery over Network, the Save Scan Information File
dialog box will appear when you select a place to store scan info. You may save it to the local or remote
computer.
To load scan information
1
Select Open Scan Information on the Drive or contextual menu and select the required file with the
scan information
>
>
2.2.2
You may create your own known file types and add their file signatures for scanning in Known File Types. They
will appear in their respective folders on the File Types dialog box.
You can do that either by using the R-Studio's graphic interface or by direct editing the known file description
file specified on the R-Studio Main settings dialog box.
Creating a Known File Types using a Graphic User's Interface
The easiest way to add your own is to use the R-Studio's graphic interface.
To create a Known File Type,
1
On the Main settings dialog box, click the Edit User's File Types... button
39
>
Click the Create File Types button and specify File type properties
Edit User's File Types dialog box
Required
group
string
Optional
description
string
features
NO_SCAN
TXT_ANSI
TXT_UNICODE
Optional
Optional
extension
3
<string>
Optional
40
Click the Add Signature button, specify the signature parameters, and click the Save button
Edit User's File Types dialog box
From
A decimal number specifying the leftmost possible offset for the file signature.
To
A decimal number specifying the rightmost possible offset for the file signature.
You may specify as many signatures as you need. Moreover, you may specify subgroups within a signature
using the Add Subgroup button. The structure of such possible subgroups is described on the Customizing
File Types-II help page.
>
The newly specified file type will appear on the Edit User's File Types dialog box and the File Types
dialog box
Edit User's File Types dialog box
41
2.2.3
The syntax of signature description is similar to that of the XML language. They are stored in an .xml file the
path to which is specified on the Setting dialog box.
More advanced features are described in Customizing File Types-II.
Signature file example
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<FileTypeList>
<!-- Search for NTFS MFT -->
<FileType id="5626" group="System Files" description="MFT" features="TXT_ANSI TXT_UNICODE">
<Signature offset="0" from="begin" count="1">FILE</Signature>
<Signature offset="7" from="end" count="1">$\x00M\x00F\x00T</Signature>
</FileType>
</FileTypeList>
File structure
File header
Section FileTypeList
<FileTypeList>
<u32>
Required
group
<string>
Optional
description
<string>
features
NO_SCAN
TXT_ANSI
TXT_UNICODE
Optional
Optional
extension
<string>
Optional
Default: unknown
Not to be scanned for. If this flag is used, R-Studio will not search for such file type. Such
files will be shown when sorting files by their extensions.
The file can viewed as ANSI text. If this flag is specified, the file can be correctly
42
represented as an ANSI text. When previewing, this file will be immediately sent to Text/
Hexadecimal Editor.
TXT_UNICODE File can viewed as UNICODE text. If this flag is specified, the file can be correctly
represented as a UNICODE text. When previewing, this file will be immediately sent to
Text/Hexadecimal Editor.
This section can contain an unlimited number of the Signature elements.If there are several Signature
elements, that means that all those signatures are simultaneously present in the file. Such signatures should have
different offset attributes and they should not overlap.
Element Signature
The element contains a string value of the file signature consisting of ASCII characters and hex bytes in the \xhh
format, where hh is a hexadecimal byte code. If there is not a hexadecimal number after \x , \x are treated as a
part of the string section of the signature
Attributes:
offset
<u16>
count
<u16>
Optional
Optional
size
<u16>
Optional
from
begin
end
Optional
Default: 0
Default: 1
Comments
<!-- Comment string -->
43
2.2.4
Currently R-Studio supports two versions of file type descriptions. Version 2 extends legacy Version 1 by
adding variable signature offsets and AND/OR combination of several signatures in one file type. The version of
file type description is specified by the version attribute of the FileTypeList section . Version 1 is the default
option.
File structure
Elements common to Versions 1 and 2 of file type description
File header
Section FileTypeList
<FileTypeList>
Attributes:
version
1.0
2.0
Optional
Default: 1.0
Section FileType
<u32>
Required
group
<string>
Optional
description
features
<string>
NO_SCAN
Optional
Optional
TXT_ANSI
TXT_UNICODE
extension
<string>
Optional
44
be scanned for. If this flag is used, R-Studio will not search for such file type.
Such files will be shown when sorting files by their extensions.
The file can be viewed as ANSI text. If this flag is specified, the file can be correctly
represented as an ANSI text. When previewing, this file will be immediately sent to Text/
hexadecimal editor.
The file can be viewed as UNICODE text. If this flag is specified, the file can be
correctly represented as a UNICODE text. When previewing, this file will be
immediately sent to Text/hexadecimal editor.
TXT_ANSI
TXT_UNICODE
dialog box.
graphics
Graphics/Picture
Internet-related files
multimedia
Multimedia Files
audio
Multimedia: Audio Files
video
Multimedia: Video Files
font
Font
document
Document
doc_database
Document: Database
doc_sheet
Document: Spreadsheet
exe
Executable/Library/DLL
unknown
Other file types
This section can contain an unlimited number of the Signature elements.If there are several Signature
elements, that means that all those signatures are simultaneously present in the file. Such signatures should have
different offset attributes and they should not overlap.
internet
Element Signature
The element contains a string value of the file signature consisting of ASCII characters and hex bytes in the \xhh
format, where hh is a hexadecimal byte code. If that is not a hexadecimal number after \x, \x are treated as a
part of the string section of the signature
Attributes:
offset
count
<u16>
<u16>
Optional
Optional
45
size
<u16>
Optional
from
begin
end
Optional
46
</End>
</FileType>
</FileTypeList>
Section FileType
and
or
Optional
</Signature>
</Signature>
47
</FileType>
</FileTypeList>
These sections can contain one of several elements Signature. And one or several elements OR or AND. If there
are several elements inside the section they are combined according to the section type (logical AND or OR).
Example:
<FileTypeList version=2.0>
<FileType id="2" group="archive" description="ARJ Archive" extension="arj">
<Begin>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
...
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
<AND>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
<OR>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
<AND>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
</AND>
<OR>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
</OR>
</OR>
<Signature [attributes]> ... </Signature>
</AND>
</Begin>
</FileType>
</FileTypeList>
Element Signature
The element contains a string value of the file signature consisting of ASCII characters and hex bytes in the \xhh
format, where hh is a hexadecimal byte code. If that is not a hexadecimal number after \x, \x are treated as a
part of the string section of the signature
Attributes:
offset
from
<u16>
<u16>
Optional
Optional
to
<u16>
Optional
size
<u16>
Optional
Default: 0
Default: undefined
Default: undefined
48
the element.
Example:
<FileTypeList version=2.0>
<FileType id="2" group="archive" description="ARJ Archive" extension="arj">
<Begin>
<Signature offset="3">Abc\x5c\x00\x04</Signature>
<Signature from="9" to="15">\x23\x01\xf4</Signature>
</Begin>
</FileType>
</FileTypeList>
2.2.5
Regions
Scanning large objects may take a long time. Sometimes, only smaller area of a disk needs to be scanned or
searched for files. Such area is called a region. A region can be created on any object in the R-Studio's Drives
panel.
Created regions can be scanned, and files on them can be recovered in the same way as from hard drives or
logical disks.
Created regions can be deleted.
Note: R-Studio does not create anything real on the disk. Regions are virtual objects that do not affect actual
data on the disk.
To create a region
1
Control-click the selected object and select Create Region on the contextual menu
or
Select the object and select Create Region on the Create menu
Specify required parameters on the Create region dialog box and click the Create button
Create region dialog box
Region options
Disk size:
Shows size of the object where the region is to
49
gb gigabytes
tb terabytes
Sec sectors
>
To remove a region
Remove button, or
Control-click the selected region and select Remove Region on the contextual menu.
2.2.6
Exclusive Regions
*
Exclusive regions are areas on any object visible on the the R-Studio's Drives panel that are excluded from disk
operations. R-Studio never tries to read/write data from/to such area. Exclusive regions are necessary when, for
example, there are areas with bad sectors on a hard drive, and it is necessary to avoid any disk operations with
such areas to not inflict further damage to such drive and to speed work with it.
Note: R-Studio does not create anything real on the disk. Exclusive regions are virtual objects that do not affect
actual data on the disk.
To create an exclusive region
1
Select the object and select Create Exclusive Region on the Create menu
2
Specify required parameters on the Create Exclusive Region dialog box and click the Add button
Create exclusive region dialog box
50
Delete button, or
Control-click the selected region and select Remove Region on the contextual menu.
Select an Exclusive Region on the R-Studio Drives panel and click the
Control-click an Exclusive Region on the R-Studio Drives panel, select Edit on the contextual menu,
and add/delete excluded areas on the Edite Exclusive Region dialog box.
You may delete an excluded area by control-clicking it and selecting Remove on the contextual menu.
2.2.7
Images
An image is an exact, byte by byte, copy of any object on the Drives panel. When created, images can be
processed like their original objects.
Images are very useful if there is a risk of total data loss due to hardware malfunction. If bad blocks are
constantly appearing on a hard drive, you must immediately create an image of this drive. All data search, scan
and restoring can be done from this image.
While creating images, R-Studio can simultaneously perform disk scan and save scan information to lessen time
necessary to process the disk.
The image can be saved on the remote computer if it is created via network. R-Studio can also load and process
images created with the DeepSpar Disk Imager.
To create an image,
1
or
Control-click the selected object and select Create Image File on the contextual menu
2
Specify image options, a file name, and destination for the image on the Drive Image Wizard
Note: To store an image file, you need a free space equal to at least the object size.
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52
.
Create Image (Scan Information) dialog box
If this option is selected, R-Studio will perform disk scan simultaneously with
image creation. See the Disk Scan help page to learn scan options.
Specifies how many times R-Studio will try to read a bad sector.
R-Studio treats bad sectors in the following way:
It reads a certain part of disk (predefined by Windows) and
If Default read attempts is set to 0, the entire part with bad sectors will be filled
with the specified pattern.
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>
If Default read attempts is set to a non-zero value, R-Studio reads again that
part sector by sector, repeating the attempts the specified number of times. If
R-Studio still cannot read a bad sector, it fills the sectors with the specified
pattern. In this case only the bad sectors will be filled with the pattern, but that
extremely slows the disk read process.
For example, if you set Default read attempts to 1, a bad sector will be read 2
times.
Specifies a pattern R-Studio will use to fill bad sectors in in images /
Hexadecimal Editor. You may specify the pattern either in the ANSI or Hex data
format.
Note: R-Studio will never ever try to write anything on the disk from which data
is to recover or an image is to create. This pattern fills bad sectors only in the
image.
R-Studio will start creating the image, the Progress message showing the progress.
or
>
You may perform all data search, scan, and recovery from this image as it were a regular drive/disk object.
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Byte-to-byte images
2.2.8
Object Copy
You may copy any object in the Drives panel to any other object, if there is enough space on the target one.
Before Copy object to... becomes enabled on the Create menu, you need to enable writing.
To enable writing,
1
On the R-Studio main panel, select the R-Studio menu, then Preferences, and select Enable Write on
the Settings dialog box.
>
An exact copy of the source object (or a part thereof) to the destination device (from its beginning or a specified
offset). Any object may be copied to any object this way.
To perform a binary copy of an object,
1
Select a source and destination objects on the Drives Copy Wizard panel and click the Continue button
Drives Copy Wizard
55
Select Binary (byte to byte) copy on the Copy Options dialog box, specify copy options, and click the
Continue button
Copy options dialog box
Copy options
Source
Copy whole object
Copy range
Offset
Size
Select this option if you want to copy the entire source object to the destination one
Select this option if you want to copy a part of the source object
Specify the offset from which the source object data will be copied to the destination
object
Specify the size of the source object data which will be copied to the destination
object
Destination
Offset
Specify the offset on the destination object to which the source object data will be
copied
View the copy task settings on the Drives Copy Wizard and click the Done button
Drives Copy Wizard
56
R-Studio will start copying data from the source object to the destination one.
You may close the wizard by pressing the Esc key.
Only partitions can be copied with this option to other partitions or empty spaces. You may change some
parameters of the the copied partition(s) on the destination drive.
To perform a smart partition copy of a partition,
1
Select Smart partition copy on the Copy Options panel, specify copy options, and click the Continue
button
Copy options dialog box
57
Copy options
Destination
Copy without
stretching
Select this option if you want to copy the partition exactly to the destination place
Copy to:
Select this option if you want to change some parameters of the copied partition on
the destination place
Specify how much space will be left empty before the start of the copied partition
Select this option and specify the new size of the copied partition
Specify the type of the partition to be copied. Do not change this setting unless you
have serious reasons to do so.
View the copy task settings on the Drives Copy Wizard and click the Done button
Drives Copy Wizard
R-Studio will start copying data from the source partition to the destination place.
You may close the wizard by pressing the Esc key.
Only whole drives can be copied with this option to other drives. You may change some parameters of the
copied drives.
1
58
Select source and destination hard drives on the Drives Copy Wizard panel and click the Continue
button
Drives Copy Wizard
Select Smart drive copy on the Copy Options panel, specify copy options, and click the Next button
Copy options dialog box
Copy options
Copying mode
Copy all partitions
onto original places
Select this option if you want to copy all partitions to their original places.
Select this option if you want to copy the partitions one after another preserving their
space. If there is empty space between the partitions, it will be omitted. Otherwise it
is similar to Copy all partitions onto original places.
If Fixed active partition is selected, the original offset/size of the active partition will be
preserved (in case the loader has links to it).
Specify this option if you want to proportionally expand/shrink the selected partitions
to occupy the entire target drive.
If Fixed active partition is selected, the original offset/size of the active partition will be
preserved (in case the loader has links to it).
Expand/Shrink
partition to whole
disk
59
View the copy task settings on the Drives Copy Wizard and click the Finish button
Drives Copy Wizard
R-Studio will start copying data from the source hard drive to the destination one
You may close the wizard by pressing the Esc key.
2.3
If you need to recover multiple files you may do it through the following steps:
1
Go to the Find and Mark Multiple Files topic for more information
2
Create file recovery lists to manually edit the list of files to recovery
R-Studio stores information about found files in computer memory. If there are too many files, R-Studio may
run out of it. To avoid this, you have two options:
Recover all files
If you want to recover data from an entire file system object (a logical disk, partition, partition image, etc.), you
may use the Recover All Files command from the Drive or contextual menu. Right click the object in the Drives
panel to access the contextual menu. A Recover dialog box will appear. Select required restore settings,
including file mask. This command restores unlimited number of files without memory restrictions.
View file information in steps
As soon as R-Studio nearly runs out of memory, a 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 section
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>
respective option,
or
On the Folders panel, control-click the disk letter and select Show Files Sorted By on the contextual
menu and select the respective option,
R-Studio will show the sorted files in the Folders and Content panels, showing the path to each file:
Folders panel for files sorted by their extensions
Content
On the Drives panel, control-click the logical disk, select Open Drive Files Sorted By on the contextual
menu, and select Real File System Structure,
or
On the Folders panel, select Show Files Sorted By on the Drive menu and select Real File System
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Structure
or
Click the Real tab
By finding and marking multiple files using the Find/Mark dialog box
You may find and mark all the files on the entire disk by using Mark matched files in the Find/Mark mode option.
You may specify all the necessary search options and mark all the found files. Please note that each find and
mark/unmark operation is independent from previous ones. That is, if a file matches the search criteria, it will be
marked/unmarked regardless of its previous marked/unmarked state.
For example, if you first mark all doc files, and then all txt files, all doc files remain marked, too. If you then
decide to unmark all files smaller than 2 kB, all doc and txt files will stay marked except those that less than 2
kB.
2.3.2
Recover Multiple Files
If R-Studio while recovering files encounters either an already existing file or file with a broken name, normally it
will stop working and ask you what to do with the file. If you recover multiple files, that may require you answer
a lot of the same questions. You may use Mass File Recovery Options on the Recover dialog box to instruct RStudio what to do in those cases for all files.
Recover (Advanced) dialog box
Overwrite
Skip
Broken File Name
Prompt
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Skip
If this option is selected, R-Studio skips all files with broken file names.
Hidden Attribute
These options instruct R-Studio what to do if a file to be recovered appears
to have the Hidden attribute.
Prompt
If this option is selected, R-Studio asks the user what to do with the attribute.
It stops file recovery until it receives the answer.
Remove
If this option is selected, R-Studio removes the Hidden attribute from all files.
Keep
If this option is selected, R-Studio keeps the Hidden attribute for all files.
2.3.3
File Recovery Lists
You may create a file containing a list of files and folder found on a disk/partition. Then such file may be manually
edited to specify files to recover and then loaded back into R-Studio. R-Studio will automatically mark the files
in this list for recovery. Such file lists recovery are very useful, for example, when it is necessary to have such file
lists approved for recovery by someone else who is far away from the computer where R-Studio is running.
You may create file recovery lists for the entire disk or for specific folders. Moreover, you may create a file
recovery list for all files within the disk/folder, or for marked files/folders only.
Creating a file recovery list
To create a file recovery list
1
For an entire disk, select Save File Names to File on the File menu, or
Control-click the uppermost folder (higher than Root, usually the letter or the name of the disk) and select
Save File Names to File on the contextual menu.
For a specific folder, control-click the folder and select Save File Names to File on the contextual
menu.
2
Specify the place to save the file recovery list and other necessary options on the Save File Names
dialog box
Save File Names dialog box
63
is a parameter specifying a character for path delimitation. You may also specify a Unix-
:# PathDelim = \
:# PathDelim = /
In addition, the files from the virtual folders Metafiles, ExtraFoundFiles, etc..., have the following
designations:
///m/[localized_name_for_Metafiles]/
Metafiles:
Extra Found ///e/[localized_name_for_ExtraFoundFiles]/
Files:
Other Virtual ///v/[localized_name_for_OtherVirtualFolders]/
Folders:
For the English language, that will look like:
///m/Metafiles\
///m/Metafiles\$BOOT
///m/Metafiles\$FAT
///m/Metafiles\$FAT0
///m/Metafiles\$FAT1
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:+
Please note that records for folders without any marks don't affect the file marking. Thus, for the lines
:-Files to Delete\File_2.pst
Files to Delete\
file File_2.pst will not be marked.
Select Load File Names from File and Mark on the File menu and select the file.
>
R-Studio will load the file and mark the files accordingly.
2.4
R-Studio detects and processes valid hardware volume sets and RAIDs like regular drives/volumes.
R-Studio can analyze and recover data from software volume sets and RAIDs. If a software volume set or
RAID is present in your system, R-Studio detects it, and a Volume sets and RAIDs object appears on the
Drives panel. This object can be searched for files, scanned, and files found on it can be recovered the same way
as from normal drives/volumes.
If, due to hardware failure, a hardware volume set or RAID cannot be accessed, or due to data loss your system
does not recognize a software volume set or RAID, and you know what hard drives were in it, you may create a
Virtual volume set or RAID and process it like a real software volume set or RAID or hardware volume set or
RAID.
You may find more information on RAID data structure in Wikipedia.
Volume Sets, Stripe Sets, and Mirrors
Basic RAID 4 and RAID 5 Operations
Working with RAID 6 Presets
Working with RAID6 (Double Xor)
Working with RAIDs with Parity Delays
Working with Advanced RAID Layouts
Nested and Non-Standard RAID Levels
Various Disk and Volume Managers
Finding RAID Parameters
Checking RAID Consistency
Syntax of a Description File for RAID Configurations
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You may create and save your own RAID configurations for non-standard RAIDs. You may specify Offset,
Block order/size and Row count. See Working with Advanced RAID Layouts for details.
To save your own RAID configuration
1
Specify the name for the configuration on the Preset name dialog box.
Preset name dialog box
>
The configurations are stored in the user's RAID layout file. The path and name for this file is specified on the
R-Studio Settings dialog box. If no file is specified, R-Studio will ask you to enter the name.
To load your RAID configuration
*
>
Select the required configuration on the Edit Block RAID Layout Presets dialog box.
Edit Block RAID Layout Presets dialog box
3
>
You may turn the objects in the virtual RAID or volume set on-line and off-line by selecting/clearing the
checkbox on the Parents tab. It may be useful, for example, if you need to see which disk is non-actual in a
RAID5.
Actually, when you turn an object off-line, R-Studio substitutes it with a Missing Disk or Empty Space object.
Missing Disks
If one partition from a hardware volume set or RAID or software volume set or RAID is absent, due to
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hardware failure, for example, you need to add a virtual missing disk in order to correctly re-construct the
hardware volume set or RAID or software volume set or RAID structure. The missing disk should be placed in
the same place as the missing partition.
Note: R-Studio does not write anything real on the disk. Missing disks are virtual objects that do not affect
actual data on the drive.
To add an Missing disk object
1
Select a Volume sets and RAIDs object on the R-Studio's Drives panel
Control-click in the Parents tab in the right pane and select Add Missing Disk on the contextual menu
or select Add Missing Disk in the Create menu
>
2.4.1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Volume set
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
>
The Virtual volume set or RAIDs object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
To create a Stripe set object (RAID 0)
1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
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>
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
>
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The Virtual Block RAID object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
To create a Mirror set object (RAID 1)
1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Mirror
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
69
>
The Virtual Mirror object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
2.4.2
Basic RAID 4 and RAID 5 Operations
RAID 4 and RAID 5 are much similar. You may create and edit a RAID 4 object the same way as a RAID 5
one.
To create a RAID 5 object
1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 5. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
70
You also need to specify Block order for virtual RAID 5. You may select it on the Block order drop-down or
contextual menu.
If the those parameters are not correct, data on the parents will not be damaged, but files from the RAID 5
cannot be recovered.
Note: You may check how correctly you have reconstructed the original RAID 5. Find a file and preview it.
If the file appears correct, you have created a correct RAID 5 layout.
If your RAID 5 has an unusual configuration, you may create them manually. See Working with Advanced
RAID Layouts for details.
Parents tab
>
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
Creating and saving your own RAID 5 configuration
You may create and save your own RAID configurations for non-standard RAIDs. You may specify Offset,
Block order/size and Row count. See Working with Advanced RAID Layouts for details.
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2.4.3
R-Studio allows you to create and process RAID 6 layouts. You may use either presets for several RAID 6
layouts, or use your own custom ones.
R-Studio provides presets for the following RAID 6 layouts::
Reed-Solomon
Left Synchronous
Left Asynchronous
Right Synchronous
(standard),
(continuous),
In addition you may create your own RAID 6 configurations.
Right Asynchronous
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Parents tab
72
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
The Virtual Block RAID object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
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.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the
for details.
2.4.4
Working with RAID6 (Double Xor) Presets
R-Studio allows you to create and process RAID 6 Double Xor layouts with the following presets:
EVENODD
RAID DP
X-Code(2)
Adaptec 3805
In addition you may create your own RAID 6 configurations.
Creating a RAID 6 (Double Xor) object from a preset:
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
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Parents tab
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original volume set. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
The Virtual Block RAID object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel. The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file
for this RAID configuration.
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You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the
for details.
2.4.5
Working with RAIDs with Parity Delays
R-Studio allows you to create RAIDs with parity delays (any level that allows that). For example, let us create a
RAID 5 the parity delays with the following layout:
Three disks,
Delay=16
Block size: 16 KB
Offset: 1088 sectors (544 KB)
Block order: Left Asynchronous (Continuous)
Block order table:
A
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
1
3
5
7
9
11
13
15
17
19
21
23
25
27
29
31
33
35
37
39
41
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
28
30
32
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
34
36
38
40
42
Delay=16
Delay=16
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
43
45
47
49
51
53
55
57
59
61
63
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
PD
65
67
69
71
73
75
77
79
81
83
85
87
89
91
93
95
44
46
48
50
52
54
56
58
60
62
64
66
68
70
72
74
76
78
80
82
84
86
88
90
92
94
96
76
Delay=16
Click the Create virtual volume sets or RAIDs button and select Create Virtual Block RAID & Autodetect
or select Create Virtual Block RAID & Autodetect on the Create menu
Check that the Apply changes immediately check box is clear on the Parents tab. This will prevent R-Studio
from trying to start processing the RAID configuration until you specify it completely.
2
Drug the required objects from the Drives pane to the Parents tab and select RAID 5 on the RAID type
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
These objects may be hard drives, logical disks, or images. Check that the objects are correctly placed.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 5. If this order is
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incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
Add Empty Space/Add Missing Disk
Remove
Move Up
Move Down
Synchronize Offsets
Specify the Block size and Offset parameters on the Parents tab
Specify the parity delay number in the Parity delay control on the Parents tab.
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Select Left Asynchronous (Continuous) on the Block Order Field and click the Apply button on the
Parents tab
>
The created Virtual Block RAID 1 object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on this RAID object, a partition object will appear on the Drives
panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.6
Working with Advanced RAID Layouts
R-Studio allows you to create and process very complex custom RAID layouts.
Advanced RAID 5
PD
PD
1
3
2
4
79
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
PD
7
9
11
13
15
17
5
PD
PD
PD
14
16
18
6
8
10
12
PD
PD
PD
Click the Create virtual volume sets or RAIDs button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drug the required objects from the Drives pane to the Parents tab and select RAID 5 on the RAID type
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
These objects may be hard drives, logical disks, or images. Check that the objects are correctly placed.
Object control buttons
Locate
Add Empty Space/Add Missing Disk
Remove
Move Up
Move Down
Synchronize Offsets
Specify the Block size and Offset parameters on the Parents tab
80
Use the RAID sequence window to move from one row to another.
Using the keyboard: arrow keys to navigate, digit and p keys to enter the block order.
Using the mouse: control-click the cell and select the number or parity from the contextual menu. If the
block table is too large, you better use the keyboard to enter the digits.
Corrections: R-Studio will tell you if some digits are not correct. Navigate to the required cell and enter the
correct value. Use the Delete key to clear a cell.
Clear the table: Control-click the table and select Clear all on the contextual menu.
6
When you finishes entering the information, click the Apply button on the Parents tab
81
>
The created Virtual Block RAID 1 object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on this RAID object, a partition object will appear on the Drives
panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the
for details.
Advanced RAID 5
Another example is a RAID with the following layout, similar to that used in Mac Pro internal RAID cards with 4
hard drives.
Four disks,
Block size: 512 KB (1024 sectors)
Offset: 32768 sectors (64 KB)
Block order:
A
PD
1
2
PD
3
4
PD
5
6
PD
7
8
As you see, this layout cannot be fit directly into a standard 2D block order table. Still, it's possible to create
such RAID layout using the RAID Sequence window.
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Click the Create virtual volume sets or RAIDs button and select Create Virtual Block RAID & Autodetect
or select Create Virtual Block RAID & Autodetect on the Create menu
Check that the Apply changes immediately check box is clear on the Parents tab. This will prevent R-Studio
from trying to start processing the RAID configuration until you specify it completely.
2
Drug the required objects from the Drives pane to the Parents tab and select RAID 5 on the RAID type
These objects may be hard drives, logical disks, or images. Check that the objects are correctly placed.
Object control buttons
Locate
Add Empty Space/Add Missing Disk
Remove
Move Up
Move Down
Synchronize Offsets
Specify the Block size and Offset parameters on the Parents tab
Manually enter 3 to Number of rows on the Parents tab and change Block order to Custom
Control-click the RAID Sequence window and select Remove All. Manually enter 3 to Number of rows
on the Parents tab and change Block order to Custom
Control-click Cell 1 in the block order table and select Create New Sequence.
Control-click Cell 2 in the block order table and select Add to Sequence, do that for Cell 3, too.
Control-click Cell 4 in the block order table and select Create New Sequence.
Control-click Cell 5 in the block order table and select Add to Sequence, do that for Cell 6, too.
Continue those steps for the rest of the table until the RAID Sequence window will have 4 sequences of 3
disks:
83
Sequences window
10 Select the first line in the RAID Sequence window, control-click Cell 1 in the block order table, and
select Parity of Data.
If any unnecessary sequences appear, control-click them in the RAID Sequence window, and select
Remove.
11 Control-click Cell 2 in the block order table and select 1, do that for Cell 3 selecting 2.
If any unnecessary sequences appear, control-click them in the RAID Sequence window, and select
Remove.
12 Move to the next sequence in the RAID Sequence window and repeat the procedure for cells 4, 5, and
6.
Do that for the rest of the sequences until you fill all cells in the block order table in the Parents tab.
>
The created Virtual Block RAID 1 object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on this RAID object, a partition object will appear on the Drives
panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the
84
for details.
Advanced RAID 6 Layout
RS
4
8
12
PD
PA
1
5
9
PD
RS
PA
2
6
PD
RS
13
PA
3
PD
RS
10
14
PA
PD
RS
7
11
15
PA
where
PD is parity of data;
PA is parity of all;
RS is Reed-Solomon;
Rows from 1 to 5 use two types of error correction: parity of data (xor) and Reed-Solomon. That is, row 1 uses
blocks A1 and E1, row 2 uses blocks D2 and E2, and so on.
Row 6 is used for error correction for columns. That is, column A uses block A6, column B uses B6, and so on.
Parity of all is used for error correction.
1
Click the Create virtual volume sets or RAIDs button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drug the required objects from the Drives pane to the Parents tab and select Custom on the RAID type
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
These objects may be hard drives, logical disks, or images. Check that the objects are correctly placed.
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Specify the Block size and Offset parameters on the Parents tab
You may enter either a block number, or an error correction block of the following types:
PD
Parity of data
PA
Parity of all
RS
Reed-Solomon
U
Unknown
I
Ignore
Note: You should specify an error correction block only when the correct sequence is selected on the RAID
Sequences window.
Using the keyboard: arrow keys to navigate, digit, and rs, pd, pa, u, i keys to enter the block order.
Using the mouse: control-click the cell and select the number or parity from the contextual menu. If the
block table is too large, you better use the keyboard to enter the digits.
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Select the required row sequence on the RAID Sequences window, select the cell on the RAID table, and
enter the required value. R-Studio automatically generates those sequences when you add RAID parents.
For the columns and arbitrary sequences:
You need to create those sequences and add the respective blocks to it manually.
To create a sequence: Click Add empty on the RAID Sequences window or select Create New
Sequence on the contextual menu on the Parents tab.
To add a block to a sequence: Control-click the respective cell and select Add To Sequence on the
contextual menu on the Parents tab.
To remove a block to a sequence: Control-click the respective cell and select Remove From Sequence
on the contextual menu on the Parents tab.
6
When you finishes entering the information, click the Apply button on the Parents tab
>
The created Virtual Block RAID 1 object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on this RAID object, a partition object will appear on the Drives
panel.
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The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the
for details.
2.4.7
Nested and Non-Standard RAID Levels
RAID10 (1+0)
RAID1E
RAID5E
RAID5EE
RAID6E
2.4.7.1
RAID10 (1+0)
A RAID 10 (or 1+0) is a stripe of mirrors. Its block order can be represented as:
1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
3
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You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 10. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
Parents tab
89
>
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.7.2
RAID1E
RAID 1E is utilizes both the mirroring and striping: data is striped across all drives, as in RAID 0. Additionally, a
copy of each stripe is stored on a different drive, as in RAID 1. Its block order can be represented as:
1
2
1
2
1
3
2
3
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
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You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 1E. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
Parents tab
91
>
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.7.3
RAID5E
RAID 5E (where E stands for Enhanced) is a RAID 5 layout with an integrated hot-spare drive, where the spare
drive is an active part of the block rotation scheme. An example of such RAID layout is in the table below:
A
1
2
3
PD
5
6
PD
4
3
9
PD
7
8
4
PD
10
11
12
5
SP
SP
SP
SP
where PD and SP stand for Parity of Data and Spare Part.
2
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
>
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
92
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
3
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 5E. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
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Parents tab
>
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.7.4
RAID5EE
RAID 5EE (where E stands for Enhanced) is a RAID 5 layout with an integrated hot-spare drive, where the
spare drive is an active part of the block rotation scheme. An example of such RAID layout is in the table below:
A
1
2
SP
PD
2
4
SP
PD
3
3
SP
PD
5
6
4
PD
7
8
SP
where PD and SP stand for Parity of Data and Spare Part.
To create a RAID 5EE object
1
Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
>
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
94
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
3
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 5EE. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
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Parents tab
>
The RAID 5EE object can now be processed like regular drives/volumes
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.7.5
RAID6E
RAID 6E (where E stands for Enhanced) is a RAID 6 layout with an integrated hot-spare drive, where the spare
drive is an active part of the block rotation scheme. An example of such RAID layout is in the table below:
A
1
RS
1
2
3
4
PD
2
5
6
7
8
PD
RS
3
10
11
12
PD
RS
9
4
15
16
PD
RS
13
14
5
20
PD
RS
17
18
19
6
PD
RS
21
22
23
24
7
SP
SP
SP
SP
SP
SP
where RS, PD and SP stand for Reed-Solomon, Parity of Data, and Spare Part, respectively.
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Click the Create Virtual RAID button and select Create Virtual Block RAID
Drag the required partitions from the Drives panel to the Parents tab
Other ways to add objects
Control-click the Parents
tab and select the required partition from the contextual menu,
or
Control-click the partition on the Drives panel, select Add to RAID on the contextual menu, and select
the RAID object you want to add the partition to.
3
You may either make R-Studio to process your changes immediately or wait until you finish editing the
RAID layout. Select or clear the Apply changes immediately checkbox on the Parents tab. Click the Apply
button to apply the changes when are you through.
Note: Objects should be placed in the same order as they were in the original RAID 6E. If this order is
incorrect, you must change it by dragging the parents to place them in the correct order.
Object control buttons
Locate
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Parents tab
>
If R-Studio detects a valid file system on the newly created RAID object, a partition object will appear on
the Drives panel.
The Description Files for RAID Configurations topic shows the RAID description file for this RAID
configuration.
You also may check the RAID consistency, if necessary. See the Checking RAID Consistency help page
for details.
2.4.8
Various Disk and Volume Managers
R-Studio can work with objects created by various disk and volume managers. Currently, the following
managers are supported:
Windows Storage Spaces
Apple RAIDs
Logical Volume Manager (LVM and LVM2)
R-Studio can automatically recognize and add their physical components, component images, or the user can
manually add the components when their data is damaged so severely that R-Studio cannot recognize them.
2.4.8.1
Windows storage spaces is a new storage technology, introduced in Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012, that
allows the user to combine various (not always similar) hard drives into a kind of a RAID or compound volume.
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First, the hard drives are combined into a storage pool, then several storage spaces with striping (similar to
RAID0), mirroring (similar to RAID1), and parity (similar to RAID5) can be created in that storage pool. You
may read more about storage pools and spaces in the Microsoft's Storage Spaces: FAQ
When drives from a storage pool are connected to a Windows computer, it automatically detects them and
assembles storage spaces accordingly.
R-Studio supports Windows Storage Spaces created by Windows 8/8.1 and Windows 10
When Windows storage spaces use caching, R-Studio can process both the cache and the storage space itself
simultaneously greatly increasing chances for successful recovery of deleted files. For SSD (Solid State Device)
media, bypassing the cache may be the only available option to recover lost files.
Storage spaces in Windows
Storage pools and spaces can be managed using the Storage Spaces item in the Windows Control Panel.
Storage spaces in Windows
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R-Studio automatically detects disks from storage pools and creates storage pools and spaces automatically. At
the same time, R-Studio gives access to the parents of the storage spaces (hard drives and images).
Storage spaces in R-Studio
If missing parents of a storage space are added to R-Studio (including disk images), R-Studio automatically
adds them to their respective storage spaces.
When storage space parents are such damaged that R-Studio cannot recognize them as parents of broken
storage spaces, you may add them manually. Control-click the required storage space, select Add missing
parents on the contextual menu and select the required object(s) on the Add missing parent dialog box.
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2.4.8.2
Apple RAIDs
OS X can create several software RAIDs from disks connected to a Mac computer: RAID1 (Mirror set),
RAID0 (Stripe set), and Concatenated disk set.
Apple RAID0 example
R-Studio automatically detects disks from Apple RAID sets and creates their virtual RAIDs automatically. At
the same time, R-Studio gives access to the individual members of the Apple RAID sets (hard drives and
images).
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If recognized members of a Apple RAID are added to R-Studio (including disk images), R-Studio automatically
adds them to their respective Apple RAIDs.
When Apple RAID members are such damaged that R-Studio cannot recognize them as members of broken
Apple RAIDs, you may add them manually. Control-click the required Apple RAID, select Add missing disks
on the contextual menu and select the required object(s) on the Add missing disks dialog box.
Add missing disk dialog box
2.4.8.3
Linux LVM/LVM2
Linux LVM is a logical volume manager for the Linux OS that manages disk drives and other data storage
devices. Using it, It is possible to create single logical volumes on several physical disks, add and replace them in
a running system, resize logical volumes, create various RAID configuration, and so on. You may read more
about Linux LVM on this Wikipedia article: Logical Volume Manager (Linux).
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R-Studio automatically detects disks from LVMs and creates their virtual volumes automatically. At the same
time, R-Studio gives access to the components of the virtual LVM volumes (hard drives and images).
LVM Volumes in R-Studio
R-Studio shows broken virtual LVM volumes in pink. Broken LVM volumes in R-Studio
If recognized components of a virtual LVM volume are added to R-Studio (including disk images), R-Studio
automatically adds them to their respective virtual LVM volumes.
When virtual LVM volume components are such damaged that R-Studio cannot recognize them as components
of broken virtual LVM volumes, you may add them manually. Control-click the required virtual LVM volume,
select Add missing disks on the contextual menu and select the required object(s) on the Add missing disk
dialog box.
Add missing disk dialog box
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2.4.9
R-Studio can find parameters for RAID 5 and 6. RAID parameters can be found automatically or manually.
The number of disks in the RAID should be between 3 and 32. RAID parameters can be found only when all
original disks (or their images) are present. Even one substitute object in a RAID (like a missing disk) makes
finding RAID parameters impossible.
To find RAID parameters automatically,
1
>
R-Studio will start searching for the RAID parameters and show the most probable one on the RAID
Parameter Detection dialog box
RAID Parameter Detection dialog box
R-Studio will change the RAID layout to the selected one on the Parents
>
If necessary, you may return to the RAID Parameter Detection dialog box by clicking the Choose Variants
button, and select another RAID layout.
To find RAID parameters manually,
1
Click the drop-down Auto Detect list on the Parents tab and select Advanced Detection.
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Specify the necessary detection parameters on the RAID Parameter Detection dialog box and click the
Start detection button
Raid Parameters Detection dialog box
You may change the disk order, offset for disk(s), and enable /disable disks.
Advanced Parameters
Max offset:
The area on the disk to find RAID parameters in.
Offset search
performance
RAID layouts search
performance
3
Select an offset and click the Click here to find RAID Layouts button on the RAID Layout Autodetect
dialog box
RAID Parameters Detection dialog box
You may add your own RAID offsets. Control-click empty space on the Found offsets pane and select Add
Custom offset on the contextual menu and specify the offset individually for every disk.
4
Select a RAID variant on the Found RAID layouts pane and click the Apply button
105
>
If necessary, you may return to the RAID Parameter Detection dialog box by clicking the Choose Variants
button, and select another RAID layout.
2.4.10 Checking RAID consistency
You may check RAID consistency (whether the data parity values are valid) for RAID layouts with parity
blocks.
To check RAID consistency,
*
Control-click the RAID and select Check RAID consistency... on the contextual menu
>
The RAID consistency check window will appear showing the progress.
RAID consistency check window
2.4.11
Offset in the data. Enter the address you want to jump to and press the Enter key.
Specifies the dimension of the data in the Offset field.
Moves to the previous/next part of the data.
Zooms into/out of, the data.
You may create and store your own RAID configurations The syntax of those files is similar to that of the XML
language. They are stored in an .xml file specified on the R-Studio Settings.
A number of file examples are shown on the Description Files for RAID Configurations topic.
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File header
Section RAIDList
<RAIDList>
It can contain any number of the <RAID> sections and requires a closing element </FileTypeList>.
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Section RAID
<string>
parents
<u16>
rows
<u16>
blocksize
<u32>
Optional
Required
Required
Required
Section Table
This section describes the RAID layout table. It contains the <Block> elements which number is a product of
two attributes in the <RAID> section: <parents> x <rows>.
Section structure example:
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="example" parents="2" rows="2" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block [attributes]> ... </Block>
<Block [attributes]> ... </Block>
<Block [attributes]> ... </Block>
<Block [attributes]> ... </Block>
</Table>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
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Element Block
The element specifies the block number in the RAID layout table (a positive integer number) or an error
correction block of the following types:
PD or ParityOfData
PA or ParityOfAll
RS or ReedSolomon
U or Unknown
I or Ignore
Any other value is treated as Unknown.
Attributes:
id
sequence
<string>
<u16>
Required
or row Optional
Section Sequences
This section describes the data checksum sequences used to preserve data integrity. It can contain any number of
the <Sequence> elements.
Section structure example:
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="example" parents="4" rows="4" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
...
</Table>
<Sequences>
<Sequence [attributes]> ... </Sequence>
...
<Sequence [attributes]> ... </Sequence>
</Sequences>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
Element Sequence
The element contains the list of the RAID blocks separated by a space which belong to that sequence.
Attributes:
id
<u16>
Required
Element example:
This section describes the offsets of each parent object.. It contains the <Offset> elements which number
should not exceed the value of the parents attribute of the <RAID> section. If the <Offsets> section is absent,
offsets are treated as zero.
109
Element Offset
<u16>
Required
Element example:
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="example" parents="4" rows="4" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
...
</Table>
<Offsets>
<Offset id="1"> 0x00100</Offset>
<Offset id="3"> 0x01000</Offset>
</Offsets>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
Comments
<!-- Comment string -->
The stripe set layout is described in the Volume Sets, Stripe Sets, and Mirrors topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="StripeSet" parents="2" rows="2" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">1</Block>
<Block id="B1">2</Block>
<Block id="A2">3</Block>
<Block id="B2">4</Block>
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</Table>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
Basic RAID 5
The RAID layout is described in the Working with Basic RAID 4 and RAID 5 Operations topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="RAID5Layout" parents="3" rows="3" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">1</Block>
<Block id="B1">2</Block>
<Block id="C1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A2">3</Block>
<Block id="B2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C2">4</Block>
<Block id="A3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B3">5</Block>
<Block id="C3">6</Block>
</Table>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
The RAID layout is described in the RAID5 with Parity Delays Operations topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID blockSize="16384" name="RAID5Delay" parents="3" rows="48">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">1</Block>
<Block id="B1">2</Block>
<Block id="C1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A2">3</Block>
<Block id="B2">4</Block>
<Block id="C2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A3">5</Block>
<Block id="B3">6</Block>
<Block id="C3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A4">7</Block>
<Block id="B4">8</Block>
<Block id="C4">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A5">9</Block>
<Block id="B5">10</Block>
<Block id="C5">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A6">11</Block>
<Block id="B6">12</Block>
<Block id="C6">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A7">13</Block>
<Block id="B7">14</Block>
<Block id="C7">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A8">15</Block>
<Block id="B8">16</Block>
<Block id="C8">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A9">17</Block>
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<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
id="B9">18</Block>
id="C9">XorOfData</Block>
id="A10">19</Block>
id="B10">20</Block>
id="C10">XorOfData</Block>
id="A11">21</Block>
id="B11">22</Block>
id="C11">XorOfData</Block>
id="A12">23</Block>
id="B12">24</Block>
id="C12">XorOfData</Block>
id="A13">25</Block>
id="B13">26</Block>
id="C13">XorOfData</Block>
id="A14">27</Block>
id="B14">28</Block>
id="C14">XorOfData</Block>
id="A15">29</Block>
id="B15">30</Block>
id="C15">XorOfData</Block>
id="A16">31</Block>
id="B16">32</Block>
id="C16">XorOfData</Block>
id="A17">33</Block>
id="B17">XorOfData</Block>
id="C17">34</Block>
id="A18">35</Block>
id="B18">XorOfData</Block>
id="C18">36</Block>
id="A19">37</Block>
id="B19">XorOfData</Block>
id="C19">38</Block>
id="A20">39</Block>
id="B20">XorOfData</Block>
id="C20">40</Block>
id="A21">41</Block>
id="B21">XorOfData</Block>
id="C21">42</Block>
id="A22">43</Block>
id="B22">XorOfData</Block>
id="C22">44</Block>
id="A23">45</Block>
id="B23">XorOfData</Block>
id="C23">46</Block>
id="A24">47</Block>
id="B24">XorOfData</Block>
id="C24">48</Block>
id="A25">49</Block>
id="B25">XorOfData</Block>
id="C25">50</Block>
id="A26">51</Block>
id="B26">XorOfData</Block>
id="C26">52</Block>
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
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id="A27">53</Block>
id="B27">XorOfData</Block>
id="C27">54</Block>
id="A28">55</Block>
id="B28">XorOfData</Block>
id="C28">56</Block>
id="A29">57</Block>
id="B29">XorOfData</Block>
id="C29">58</Block>
id="A30">59</Block>
id="B30">XorOfData</Block>
id="C30">60</Block>
id="A31">61</Block>
id="B31">XorOfData</Block>
id="C31">62</Block>
id="A32">63</Block>
id="B32">XorOfData</Block>
id="C32">64</Block>
id="A33">XorOfData</Block>
id="B33">65</Block>
id="C33">66</Block>
id="A34">XorOfData</Block>
id="B34">67</Block>
id="C34">68</Block>
id="A35">XorOfData</Block>
id="B35">69</Block>
id="C35">70</Block>
id="A36">XorOfData</Block>
id="B36">71</Block>
id="C36">72</Block>
id="A37">XorOfData</Block>
id="B37">73</Block>
id="C37">74</Block>
id="A38">XorOfData</Block>
id="B38">75</Block>
id="C38">76</Block>
id="A39">XorOfData</Block>
id="B39">77</Block>
id="C39">78</Block>
id="A40">XorOfData</Block>
id="B40">79</Block>
id="C40">80</Block>
id="A41">XorOfData</Block>
id="B41">81</Block>
id="C41">82</Block>
id="A42">XorOfData</Block>
id="B42">83</Block>
id="C42">84</Block>
id="A43">XorOfData</Block>
id="B43">85</Block>
id="C43">86</Block>
id="A44">XorOfData</Block>
id="B44">87</Block>
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<Block id="C44">88</Block>
<Block id="A45">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B45">89</Block>
<Block id="C45">90</Block>
<Block id="A46">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B46">91</Block>
<Block id="C46">92</Block>
<Block id="A47">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B47">93</Block>
<Block id="C47">94</Block>
<Block id="A48">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B48">95</Block>
<Block id="C48">96</Block>
</Table>
<Offsets>
<Offset id="1">557056</Offset>
<Offset id="2">557056</Offset>
<Offset id="3">557056</Offset>
</Offsets>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
Advanced RAID 5
The RAID layout is described in the Working with Advanced RAID Layouts topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="RAID5Complex" parents="3" rows="9" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B1">1</Block>
<Block id="C1">2</Block>
<Block id="A2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B2">3</Block>
<Block id="C2">4</Block>
<Block id="A3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B3">5</Block>
<Block id="C3">6</Block>
<Block id="A4">7</Block>
<Block id="B4">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C4">8</Block>
<Block id="A5">10</Block>
<Block id="B5">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C5">9</Block>
<Block id="A6">11</Block>
<Block id="B6">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C6">12</Block>
<Block id="A7">13</Block>
<Block id="B7">14</Block>
<Block id="C7">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A8">15</Block>
<Block id="B8">16</Block>
<Block id="C8">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A9">17</Block>
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<Block id="B9">18</Block>
<Block id="C9">XorOfData</Block>
</Table>
<Offsets>
<Offset id="1">16777216</Offset>
<Offset id="2">16777216</Offset>
<Offset id="3">16777216</Offset>
</Offsets>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
Advanced RAID
The RAID layout is described in the Working with Advanced RAID Layouts topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID blockSize="524288" name="RAID5_MAC_Pro" parents="4" rows="3">
<Table>
<Block id="A1" sequence="1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="B1">1</Block>
<Block id="C1">2</Block>
<Block id="D1" sequence="2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A2">3</Block>
<Block id="B2">4</Block>
<Block id="C2" sequence="3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="D2">5</Block>
<Block id="A3">6</Block>
<Block id="B3" sequence="4">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C3">7</Block>
<Block id="D3">8</Block>
</Table>
<Sequences>
<Sequence id="1">A1 B1 C1</Sequence>
<Sequence id="2">D1 A2 B2</Sequence>
<Sequence id="3">C2 D2 A3</Sequence>
<Sequence id="4">B3 C3 D3</Sequence>
</Sequences>
<Offsets>
<Offset id="1">16777216</Offset>
<Offset id="2">16777216</Offset>
<Offset id="3">16777216</Offset>
<Offset id="4">16777216</Offset>
</Offsets>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
The RAID layout is described in the Working with RAID 6 Presets topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="RAID6RS" parents="5" rows="5" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="B1">1</Block>
<Block id="C1">2</Block>
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<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
<Block
</Table>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
id="D1">3</Block>
id="E1">XorOfData</Block>
id="A2">4</Block>
id="B2">5</Block>
id="C2">6</Block>
id="D2">XorOfData</Block>
id="E2">ReedSolomon</Block>
id="A3">8</Block>
id="B3">9</Block>
id="C3">XorOfData</Block>
id="D3">ReedSolomon</Block>
id="E3">7</Block>
id="A4">12</Block>
id="B4">XorOfData</Block>
id="C4">ReedSolomon</Block>
id="D4">10</Block>
id="E4">11</Block>
id="A5">XorOfData</Block>
id="B5">ReedSolomon</Block>
id="C5">13</Block>
id="D5">14</Block>
id="E5">15</Block>
Advanced RAID 6
The RAID layout is described in the Working with Advanced RAID Layouts topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<RAIDList>
<RAID name="RAID6Complex" parents="5" rows="6" blocksize="16777216">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="B1">1</Block>
<Block id="C1">2</Block>
<Block id="D1">3</Block>
<Block id="E1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A2">4</Block>
<Block id="B2">5</Block>
<Block id="C2">6</Block>
<Block id="D2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="E2">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="A3">8</Block>
<Block id="B3">9</Block>
<Block id="C3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="D3">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="E3">7</Block>
<Block id="A4">12</Block>
<Block id="B4">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="C4">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="D4">10</Block>
<Block id="E4">11</Block>
<Block id="A5">XorOfData</Block>
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<Block id="B5">ReedSolomon</Block>
<Block id="C5">13</Block>
<Block id="D5">14</Block>
<Block id="E5">15</Block>
<Block id="A6" sequence="1">XorOfAll</Block>
<Block id="B6" sequence="2">XorOfAll</Block>
<Block id="C6" sequence="3">XorOfAll</Block>
<Block id="D6" sequence="4">XorOfAll</Block>
<Block id="E6" sequence="5">XorOfAll</Block>
</Table>
<Sequences>
<Sequence id="1">A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6</Sequence>
<Sequence id="2">B1 B2 B3 B4 B5 B6</Sequence>
<Sequence id="3">C1 C2 C3 C4 C5 C6</Sequence>
<Sequence id="4">D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6</Sequence>
<Sequence id="5">E1 E2 E3 E4 E5 E6</Sequence>
</Sequences>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
RAID10 (1+0)
RAID1E
RAID5E
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RAID5EE
RAID6E
118
The RAID layout is described in the Working with RAID6 (Double Xor) Presets topic.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
119
<RAIDList>
<RAID blockSize="65536" name="RAID62X" parents="6" rows="4">
<Table>
<Block id="A1">1</Block>
<Block id="B1">2</Block>
<Block id="C1">3</Block>
<Block id="D1">4</Block>
<Block id="E1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="F1" sequence="1">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A2">5</Block>
<Block id="B2">6</Block>
<Block id="C2">7</Block>
<Block id="D2">8</Block>
<Block id="E2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="F2" sequence="2">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A3">9</Block>
<Block id="B3">10</Block>
<Block id="C3">11</Block>
<Block id="D3">12</Block>
<Block id="E3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="F3" sequence="3">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="A4">13</Block>
<Block id="B4">14</Block>
<Block id="C4">15</Block>
<Block id="D4">16</Block>
<Block id="E4">XorOfData</Block>
<Block id="F4" sequence="4">XorOfData</Block>
</Table>
<Sequences>
<Sequence id="1">A1 F1 D2 C3 D3 B4 C4</Sequence>
<Sequence id="2">B1 A2 D2 F2 C3 B4 D4</Sequence>
<Sequence id="3">C1 B2 D2 A3 C3 F3 B4</Sequence>
<Sequence id="4">D1 C2 D2 B3 C3 A4 B4 F4</Sequence>
</Sequences>
</RAID>
</RAIDList>
2.4.13
Reverse RAIDs
Reverse RAIDs is a technique that is reverse to creating virtual RAIDs. When creating a reverse RAID, the data
from a real object is decomposed into virtual parents.Then data on those virtual parents can be processed like on
real objects. They can be viewed, edited, imaged, copied to physical drives, etc.
Reverse RAID of an Object
This technique can be used to decompose data on a single volume into virtual parents. Then such virtual
parents can be processed like on real objects. They can be viewed, edited, imaged, copied to physical drives,
etc.
Reverse RAID of a RAID
This technique can be used to re-construct data on individual RAID disks when data on physical disks is
corrupted, but can be recovered using RAID redundancy. A missing disk is an example of this case. Or if there
are bad sectors scattered over the physical disks but the overall RAID integrity remains. Then the data can be
copied to physical hard drives to create a healthy RAID.
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Note: Many controllers write their own metadata to disks to recognize that the disks belong to certains RAIDs.
Without that metadata they won't see those RAIDs. You have to write that metadata manually.
2.4.13.1 Reverse RAID of an Object
This technique can be used to decompose data on a single object into virtual parents. Then such virtual parents
can be processed like on real objects. They can be viewed, edited, imaged, copied to physical drives, etc.
Suppose you have an image of a former RAID 6 (Reed-Solomon) and you wand to re-create data on individual
disks from that RAID 6. You can do that by creating a reverse RAID of an image.
Note: Many controllers write their own metadata to disks to recognize that the disks belong to certains RAIDs.
Without that metadata they won't see those RAIDs. You have to write that metadata manually.
To create a reverse RAID of a disk image (or other disk object),
1
Control-click the disk object on the Drives panel and select Create Reverse RAID on the contextual
menu.
>
Initially, the reverse RAID is set to its default values as RAID 5 on the Parents tab.
121
You need to add one reverse parent, change RAID type, and adjust RAID offset .
>
Process the appeared reverse parents on the Drives panel as real objects.
122
This technique can be used to re-construct data on individual RAID disks when data on physical disks is
corrupted, but can be recovered using RAID redundancy.
Suppose you have a RAID 5 with one missing hard drive and you need to reconstruct data on that disk. You can
do that by creating a reverse RAID for it and then copy data from that missing disk to a real one, or to an image.
Note: Many controllers write their own metadata to disks to recognize that the disks belong to certains RAIDs.
Without that metadata they won't see those RAIDs. You have to write that metadata manually.
To create a reverse RAID of a RAID with a missing disk,
1
If necessary, read the Basic RAID 4 and RAID 5 Operations and Volumes Sets and RAIDs help pages for
details.
2
Control-click the Virtual Block Raid on the Drives panel and select Create Reverse RAID on the
contextual menu.
>
These parents may be processed as real objects, they can be imaged, viewed/edited. For your case the
missing disk can be copied to a hard drive in the Drive Copy Wizard.
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Note: The reverse parents contain the data that should be on the RAID parents, according to its layout,
while RAID parents contain actual data, that may be corrupted.
2.5
This chapter explains how to perform data recovery operations over network.
R-Studio has network capabilities that allow the system administrator, using its computer, to recover files on any
computers accessible over network.
R-Studio supports the TCP/IP protocol and any protocol supported in Microsoft Network.
R-Studio Agent must be installed on computers where files are to be recovered. This free service program
gives R-Studio access to local disks on remote computers over network.
You should always disable a firewall and/or antivirus software on the both computers. As an alternative,
advanced users may tune them to allow R-Studio and R-Studio Agent to communicate via network.
All data transmitted over network are encrypted with a strong algorithm for data security. Restoring data over
network is very much the same as that on a local computer.
R-Studio Agent
Data Recovery over Network
Connecting over the Internet
2.5.1
R-Studio Agent
R-Studio Agent is a program that provides R-Studio with an access to the drives of a network computer. It
should be installed and properly registered on the computer which drives are to be accessed. R-Studio Agent
has versions for the following PC operating systems:
Mac OS
Windows
Linux
and there is R-Studio Agent Emergency that can be used to start a computer from which you are going to
recover data that cannot start other way due to a file system crash, for example. R-Studio can work equally with
all versions of R-Studio Agent and access computers run under Windows, Mac OS, and Linux.
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You must have enough rights on the remote computer to install and run R-Studio Agent.
2.5.1.1
You need to have an administrative account on the Mac computer to start R-Studio Agent for Mac.
R-Studio Agent should be installed on a network computer to enable R-Studio access to its drives. R-Studio
Agent should be registered.
If, due to file system crash, the network computer where you are going to recover your data cannot start, you
may use R-Studio Agent Emergency to start the computer.
To start the R-Studio Agent for Mac and access its main panel,
1
Go to the Application folder, double-click R-Studio Agent for Mac, and enter the account password
>
The main panel will appear. You may view its log
R-Studio Agent for Mac main panel
Specify required parameters on the R-Studio Agent Preferences dialog box and click the OK button
R-Studio Agent Preferences dialog box
Port
Accepted IP Addresses
IP Address
Subnet Mask
125
>
R-Studio Agent for Mac and select Connect from the Tools menu
Run the
Enter the necessary information on the Connect to R-Studio dialog box and click the Connect button.
Connect to R-Studio dialog box
>
R-Studio Agent for Mac will connect to the computer where R-Studio is running and it will show the
hard drive and logical disk structure of the remote computer.way as that on a local computer.
2.5.1.2
When installed, R-Studio Agent starts automatically and runs as a service. To configure it, R-Studio Agent
should be started again manually.
The following switches are available:
-?
evokes a help screen;
-install
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>
The main panel will appear. You may view its log
R-Studio Agent main panel
Specify required parameters on the Please configure R-Studio Agent dialog box and click the OK
button
Please configure R-Studio Agent dialog box
Accepted IP Addresses
IP Address
Subnet Mask
>
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2.5.1.3
You need to have the root privileges to run R-Studio Agent for Linux.
Unlike R-Studio Agent for Windows and R-Studio Agent for Mac, R-Studio Agent for Linux is a console application and
should be run in the Terminal. You also need to mark it as an executable before start.
When it is started for the first time, R-Studio Agent for Linux asks for its configuration.
R-Studio Agent for Linux Configuration dialog box
Specify IP
address...
Specifies addresses and a subnet mask from which this computer can be accessed.
Enter 0 to allow connections from any address.
A TCP/IP port for incoming connections. Press Enter for the default one [3174].
Don't pay much attention to the warning about "unregistered demo version". If necessary, you'll be able to
register R-Studio Agent for Linux through R-Studio.
You may see the current configuration by starting R-Studio Agent for Linux with the command rsagent -show_config .
R-Studio Agent for Linux Configuration dialog box
You may change the current configuration by starting R-Studio Agent for Linux with the command rsagent -configure .
Connecting from R-Studio Agent for Linux to R-Studio.
To establish a connection from R-Studio Agent for Linux to R-Studio,
1
Run the
128
>
R-Studio Agent for Linux will connect to the computer where R-Studio is running and it will show the
hard drive and logical disk structure of the remote computer.
R-Studio Agent should be running on the network computer where data are to be recovered.
Read the Connecting over the Internet topic to learn how to establish connection between R-Studio and RStudio Agent over the Internet.
To connect to a remote computer
1
Specify the name or IP address of the remote computer where data are to be recovered in the
Computer: field
Connect to Remote Computer dialog box
The Port should coincide with the port specified for the R-Studio Agent.
The Password: field is for the password of R-Studio Agent running on the remote computer.
Note: If the remote computer is started with R-Studio Agent Emergency, leave this field blank.
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>
R-Studio will connect to the remote computer and show its hard drive and logical disk structure of the
remote computer below the device/disk structure of your local computer
When the Recover dialog box appears, you may select whether you want to save recovered files on the local
or remote computer. Saving recovered files on a remote computer may be useful when the remote computer
has a healthy disk because you do not have to transfer files over network. It may be an external USB hard
drive, for example.
When R-Studio connects to the remote computer, it check if R-Studio Agent is present and its password.
If there is no R-Studio Agent installed, R-Studio may try to remotely install it. See the R-Studio Agent
topic for details.
2.5.3
Connecting over the Internet
R-Studio and R-Studio Agent can be connected over the Internet. The connection can be made either using IP
addresses or DNS names.
If hosts where R-Studio and R-Studio Agent are running have public IP addresses the connection can be made the
same way as for the local network, except that the IP address or DNS name should be explicitly specified in the
Computer filed the Connect to Remote Computer dialog box
If either (or both) of the hosts are on private networks behind NATs and firewalls and do not have public IP
addresses, the corresponding ports should be opened or forwarded. In addition, connection should be made
either only from R-Studio or from R-Studio Agent.
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Connection directions
* Both R-Studio and R-Studio Agent have public IP addresses (no NAT/firewall) or the ports on the NAT/
firewall are forwarded/opened.
R-Studio is behind a NAT and R-Studio Agent has a public IP address or the ports on its NAT/firewall are
forwarded/opened.
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R-Studio has a public IP address or the ports on its NAT/firewall are forwarded/opened and R-Studio Agent
is behind a NAT.
If a connection is to be made from R-Studio Agent to R-Studio, R-Studio should be set to accept connection
on the Connect to Remote Computer dialog box.
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Select Wait connection from remote computer, and specify options for incoming connections.
R-Studio Incoming Connection Options
Password:
Enter a password to obtain access to this computer from a network.
IP Address
specifies addresses from which this computer can be accessed.
Subnet Mask
specifies subnet mask of the network from which this computer can be accessed.
Port
port for incoming connections.
R-Studio will wait for an incoming connection.
Waiting for remote connection dialog box
(See the R-Studio Agent for Mac or R-Studio Agent for Linux help page to learn how to establish
connections from those R-Studio Agent versions).
To establish a connection from R-Studio Agent to R-Studio,
1
Enter the necessary information on the Connect to R-Studio dialog box and click the Connect button.
Connect to R-Studio dialog box
133
>
R-Studio Agent will connect to the computer where R-Studio is running and it will show the hard
drive and logical disk structure of the remote computer.
134
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
III
Any object visible by R-Studio can be viewed and edited in the Text/Hexadecimal Editor. It is also able to
parse the data and represent data according to various data patterns. You may also create your own patterns to
parse data.
Viewing and Editing Objects
Creating Custom Patterns
Pattern Example I
Pattern Example II
R-Studio Features
Contact Information and Technical Support
Data Recovery Using R-Studio
Basic File Recovery
Advanced Data Recovery
Mass File Recovery
Volume Sets and RAIDs
Data Recovery over Network
Technical Information and Troubleshooting
R-Studio Emergency
R-Studio Agent Emergency
3.1
Before you can physically write anything on a disk, you need to enable writing.
To enable writing,
On the
>
or
135
>
Object Properties
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
136
Binary view
Text view
Find Results
List of Bookmarks
Viewer/Editor
status
Previous Pattern
137
To enable/disable:
ANSI data
OEM data
UNICODE data
UNICODE+ data
Select Enable Write on the Tools menu if you want to save changes.
Viewing
There are up to four tabs showing the data in different representations. Actual number of tabs depends on the
object and property being viewed/edited.
Std
Exact attribute data. If the attribute is compressed, R-Studio decompresses it prior to
showing.
Unlimited
Exact attribute data + free space of last cluster. If the attribute is compressed, R-Studio
decompresses it prior to showing.
Direct
Actual data written on the disk. If the attribute is not compressed, it coincides with the Std
representation.
Allocation Resident part of the attribute.
You may view data in 4 various code pages: ANSI/OEM/UNICODE/UNICODE+ by s witching on/off the
respective code pages in the Code pages buttons or select the appropriate code pages on the View menu.
Patterns or Templates
You may select a pattern according to which the data will be parsed and shown in the parsed data pane.
The Data Interpreter shows the data selected on the Template pane in various representation.
You may find the next or previous data that matches the pattern signature on the disk. Control-click the right
pane of the editor and select either Find Template Signature Next or Find Template Signature Previous
on the contextual menu. You may also select these items on the Edit menu.
You may also create your own patterns to parse data from various objects.
Searching
To search for a particular string, click the Find, Find Next, or Find Previous buttons or the same items on
the Edit menu, and specify the string on the Search dialog box.
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
138
Search options
Search for
HEX
ANSI
OEM
UNICODE
Match case
Search area
From current
position
Select this check box to start search from the current position
From Address
Select this check box and specify the range in which the search is to be carried out
Search position
Exhaustive search
You may quickly move to a particular part of the object. To move to a particular part of the object being
viewed/edited, enter the required offset in the Go to Offset field on the right to the buttons,
Bookmarking
You may create bookmarks to easily move to those places. Control-click the cursor to the place you want to
bookmark and select Toggle Bookmark on the contextual menu. The list of bookmarks appears in the
Bookmark pane. You may easily move to the required bookmark by clicking it in the list.
You may control bookmarks on the Edit menu.
Filling an area with a pattern
To fill an area with a pattern, select Fill on the Edit menu, and specify the pattern and area on the Fill dialog
box.
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Fill options
Fill pattern
HEX
ANSI
OEM
UNICODE
Field for the pattern to fill the area in the hexadecimal representation
Field for the pattern to fill the area in the ANSI encoding
Field for the pattern to fill the area in the OEM encoding
Field for the pattern to fill the area in the UNICODE encoding
Fill range
From (hex)
To (hex)
3
Field for the start position of the area to fill with the pattern
Field for the end position of the area to fill with the pattern
or
YOU MUST BE ABSOLUTELY SURE OF WHAT AND WHERE YOU ARE WRITING!
Or you may completely lose all your data.
Selecting and saving an area in the Viewer/Editor
You may select an area in the Viewer/Editor panel and save it as a file.
To select and save an area in the Viewer/Editor panel,
1
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
140
Select an appropriate item in the Tools menu to save the data in a required format and specify its file
name
Select:
Save to Binary File...
Save to Hexadecimal
File
If a remote computer is connected for Data Recovery over Network, the Save as... dialog box will
appear when you select a place to save the data. You may save it to the local or remote computer.
>
You may load a data from a file and overwrite an area of the object opened in the Viewer/Editor panel.
To load binary data from a file and overwrite an area of the object opened in the Viewer/Editor
panel,
1
Select an area to overwrite and select Load from File... on the Tools menu
If a remote computer is connected for Data Recovery over Network, the Open as Binary File dialog box
will appear when you select a place to open the data file from. You may open it from the local or remote
computer.
>
The area in the Viewer/Editor will be overwritten with the new data.
3.2
Pattern header
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Section template
Each pattern starts with a section giving to the pattern a name that will be shown in the parsed data pane.
Attributes:
name
Example:
<template name="AVI File LIST">
........
</template>
Section signature
Attributes:
align <positive integer>
Specifies if the data structure address is aligned
Example:
<signature align="1">
<field offset="0">46 49</field>
<field offset="2">4c 45</field>
</signature>
Section section
Such sections contain all expressions and operations needed for the pattern to parse the data. A section name is
shown in the parsed data pane. In fact, sections are virtual objects used to group logically connected fields.
Sections can be nested.
The main section is not shown in the parsed data pane.
Section contain elements field which are actual data objects. field names are shown in the parsed data pane
with their values.
Attributes:
name
Example:
<section name="JUNK">
....
</section>
List of All Objects in Patterns
Sub-types:
int8
int16
int32
int64
uint8
uint16
uint32
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uint64
uintX
Attributes:
endian: (be | le |Optional.
system)Default: system.
base: (decimal | hex
Optional.
| octal)
Specifies data representation.
Default: decimal.
as-offset: <expression>
Optional. Specifies that this field is an offset and its value should be evaluated using
the expression. A special variable this returns the value of this field.
purpose: (offset |Optional.
rsector
Specifies
|sector
the |type
cluster
of the as-offset
| rcluster)
expression result . If this attribute is
present, the attribute is necessary if the offset value should differ from the value of
this field (variable this ).
rsector and rcluster are offsets relative to the absolute position of the pattern
beginning.
assigned-template:Specifies
<TemplateName>
the pattern name linked with this field. Ignored if the as-offset or
purpose attributes are not specified.
var: <Name>
Optional. Specifies the name under which the value of this field can be accessed in
expressions.
binary
Attributes:
display-encoding: (hexOptional.
| binary)
Default: hex.
size: <bytes>
Mandatory.
char
Attributes:
size: <bytes>
codepage: (ansi |
oem | utf8 | utf16)
Mandatory.
Optional. Specifies which codepage is used. Default: ansi.
filetime
Attributes:
size: <bytes>
Mandatory.
pos: <comma separated Mandatory.
list of bit
Specifies
positions>
bit positions in a data block.
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Commands
goto
Evaluates a condition specified in the test attribute and, if the condition is true, reads fields specified in this
tag.
Attribute:
test: <expression>
Sets a condition to test against.
repeat
Reads the fields specified in the tag until the exit condition is equal to 0 or specified times
Attributes:
count: <expression>
<expression> is evaluated one time upon entering the block. Internal
elements are read the specified number of times.
test: <expression>
<expression> is evaluated upon entering the block. Similar to the C++
construction while(...) {}.
test: <expression>
<expression> is evaluated upon exiting the block. Similar to the C++
construction do {} while(...).
setvar
Sets the value of an internal variable. As an example, this command is convenient to store the current offset.
The value of the current offset is stored in a predefined variable offset.
Attributes:
var: <string>
Specifies the name of the variable.
expr: <expression>
Specifies an expression which result will be assigned to the variable.
Expressions
Expressions in the patterns are arithmetic expressions which syntax is similar to that of the C language, including
operation preceding.
The following operations are supported:
+ - * / & | > < <= >= != == || &&
Predefined variables
offset
An offset in bytes from the pattern beginning data is currently read at.
start_position
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This variable exists only within the context of the ass-offset expression evaluation and is the current value
of the data field for which that expression is specified
3.3
Pattern Example I
-->
</signature>
<!-- A data section. Its name is AVI File. This is the main data section. It is not shown in the parsing tree as
a section (its name is ignored). -->
<section name="AVI File">
<!-- The first 4 bytes are read and shown as an ANSI string. -->
<field type="char" size="4" name="Signature: RIFF" var="signature"/>
<!-- The current position is moved to the beginning of the file. -->
<goto offset="-4"/>
<!-- The first 4 bytes in the file are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable signature
gets the value of the field. -->
<!-- A new internal variable endOfFile is created and the expr field evaluates its value.-->
<setvar var="endOfFile" expr="offset + dataSize - 8"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes is read and shown as an ANSI string. -->
<field type="char" size="4" name="File type"/>
145
<!-- A new internal variable chunksOffset is created, the expr filed evaluating its value. This variable
gets the absolute value of template offset. -->
<setvar var="chunksOffset" expr="start_position"/>
<!-- A loop is created. Its condition is set in the test field (while the endOfFile variable is greater
then the current position.) -->
<repeat test="endOfFile > offset">
<!-- The same 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable signature
gets this value. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Signature as unsigned integer" var="signature"/
>
<!-- The 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned hexadecimal integer. This field has the
attributes offset and assigned-template. If the user double-clicks this field, the AVI File LIST pattern
will be invoked and the current pattern position will be moved to the address specified in as-offset.-->
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="Signature LIST as unsigned
integer in hex format" as-offset="start_position +
offset
4"
assignedtemplate="AVI File LIST"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The listSize variable gets
its value. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Size of the data in the list"
var="listSize"/>
<!-- The 4 bytes are read and shown as an ANSI string. -->
<field type="char" size="4" name="List type"/>
<!-- The same 4 bytes are shown as an unsigned hexadecimal integer. The listType variable
gets its value.-->
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="List type as unsigned integer in
hex format" var="listType"/>
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<!-- The chunksOffset variable gets the value evaluated in the expr attribute. -->
<setvar var="chunksOffset" expr="start_position + offset - 4"/>
</if>
<!-- The current position is moved to the address evaluated in the address attribute. -->
<goto address="offset + listSize - 4"/>
</section>
</if>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable
gets its value. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Size of the data of the junk"
var="junkSize"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable
idxSize gets its value. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Size of the data of the idx1"
var="idxSize"/>
<!-- The section is shown with the First AVIINDEXENTRY name. -->
<section name="First AVIINDEXENTRY">
<!-- The 4 bytes are read and shown as an ANSI string. -->
<field type="char" size="4" name="Chunck id"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned hexadecimal integer. -->
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="Flags"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read ans shown as an unsigned hexadecimal integer. The offset
attribute is evaluated for this field as a sum of the chunksOffset variable and valued of this field. -->
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="Chunk offset" asoffset="chunksOffset + this"/>
<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. -->
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<!-- A test against the condition. && is a logical AND (&&) -->
<if test="signature != 1414744396 && signature != 1263424842
&& signature != 829973609">
<!-- An empty section is shown. Its name is Unknown signature found -->
<section name="Unknown signature found">
</section>
<!-- The current position is moved to the address set in the endOfFile variable. -->
<goto address="endOfFile"/>
</if>
</repeat>
</section>
</if>
</section>
</template>
3.4
Pattern Example II
-->
</signature>
<!-- A data section. Its name is AVI File LIST. This is the main data section. It is not shown in the parsing
tree as a section (its name is ignored).-->
<section name="AVI File LIST">
<!-- The first 4 bytes are read and shown as an ANSI string. -->
<field type="char" size="4" name="Signature: LIST"/>
<!-- The current position is moved to the beginning of the file (4 bytes backward). -->
<goto offset="-4"/>
<!-- The first 4 bytes in the file are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable signature
gets the value of the field. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Signature LIST as unsigned integer" var="signature"/>
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<!-- The next 4 bytes are read and shown as an unsigned integer. The internal variable listSize gets its
value. -->
<field type="uint32" name="Size of the data in the list" var="listSize"/>
<setvar var="endOfList" expr="offset + listSize"/>
<field type="char" size="4" name="List type"/>
<goto offset="-4"/>
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="List type as unsigned integer in hex
format" var="listType"/>
<goto offset="-4"/>
<field type="uint32" base="hex" name="LIST chunk ID as unsigned integer in hex
format" as-offset="start_position + offset - 4" assigned-template="AVI File LIST"/>
</if>
<field type="uint32" name="Size of the data in the chunk" var="chunkSize"/
>
<setvar var="endOfChunk" expr="offset + chunkSize"/>
<!-- Rounding the value of the variable endOfChunk to a number divisible by 2. -->
<if test="endOfChunk & 1">
<setvar var="endOfChunk" expr="endOfChunk & 0xFFFFFFFE"/>
<setvar var="endOfChunk" expr="endOfChunk + 2"/>
</if>
149
Text/Hexadecimal Editor
150
<section name="WAVEFORMATEX">
<field type="uint16" name="Waveform-audio format type"/>
<field type="uint16" name="Number of channels in the waveform-audio
data"/>
<field type="uint32" name="Sample rate, in samples per second
(hertz)"/>
<field type="uint32" name="Required average data-transfer rate, in
bytes per second, for the format tag"/>
<field type="uint16" name="Block alignment, in bytes"/>
<field type="uint16" name="Bits per sample for the Waveform-audio
format type"/>
<field type="uint16" name="Size, in bytes, of extra format
information appended to the end of the WAVEFORMATEX structure"/>
</section>
</if>
</if>
<goto address="endOfChunk"/>
</section>
</repeat>
151
</if>
<if test="signature != 1414744396">
<section name="Invalid LIST signature found">
</section>
</if>
</section>
</template>
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4.1
IntelligentScan Technology
R-Studio uses a unique IntelligentScan technology when it tries to recover the data on the area being
scanned.
While scanning the selected area, R-Studio reads data directly from the disk, analyzes them, and tries to
determine a record to which the data belong. The following record types are possible:
MBR record
NTFS Boot Sector record
FAT Boot Sector record
MFT record
NTFS Folder record
FAT record
FAT Folder record
Ext2/3/4FS SuperBlocks record
UFS/FFS SuperBlock record
HFS/HFS+ Volume Header
HFS/HFS+ BTree+ Node
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All these record types have different, but known, structure. Knowing valid values of record fields and relations
between them for each record type, R-Studio determines a record type for the data. If such record type cannot
be unambiguously determined, the data are assigned to the most probable record type. The same data can be
assigned to several record types, with a certain probability for each assignment. A list of possible files is
generated from these records.
R-Studio generates a record list for each record type. This list contains references to records assigned to a
record type from the list with their assignment probability. The same data can be included into different record
lists. Then R-Studio analyzes relations between elements in each list and between different lists, and generates a
list of found partitions with their parameters, such as partition start point and probable size, file system type,
cluster size, and existence probability.
Using the file list and partition list, R-Studio reconstructs file systems and files on the found partitions. One file
can be attributed to several different partitions.
When the entire disk or its part has been scanned, R-Studio shows all found partitions. Then the parameters of
the found partitions may be manually corrected, if additional information on them is available.
Using the IntelligentScan technology, R-Studio can recover files not only on new and existing partitions. It also
can find and recover data on partitions that have been deleted or reformatted. If, for example, there was an
NTFS partition, which later was reformatted as a FAT partition, R-Studio will show two partitions on the same
place on the disk, one having the FAT file system, the other the NTFS. Then, found files can be recovered.
The IntelligentScan technology makes R-Studio a very powerful data recovery tool, but it is not omnipotent.
As it uses probabilistic approach to data reconstruction, it cannot guarantee 100% correct results. Moreover,
even if R-Studio has reconstructed data structure correctly, it is impossible to guarantee that all found files will be
completely and correctly recovered, as new data may be already written over the old files. See the Data
Recovery Issues topic for details.
4.2
NEVER TRY TO SAVE RECOVERED FILES/FOLDERS TO THE SAME LOGICAL DISK WHERE
THEY RESIDE!!!
Or you may obtain unpredictable results and lose all of your data.
R-Studio writes directly to a hard drive only when writing recovered data and from its hex editor, if writing is
enabled. In all other actions, R-Studio only reads data and analyzes them, and never modifies data on the hard
drives being analyzed.
Most operating systems use lazy-write. So, there is a time lag between file actions and actual changes on data on
a hard drive. R-Studio analyzes data on hard drives only. That is why it does not always detect recent changes in
data structure.
Most operating systems constantly write their service information on hard drives. Such writing is especially
intensive during start-up and shut-down procedures. When an operating system deletes a file/folder, it treats the
space where it has resided as empty and may write something in this place. If this happened, the file/folder and its
parameters may be detected correctly, but its data may be lost.
Folder names like $$$Folder58448 on NTFS partitions mean that the folder has not been found on the drive but
some references to it have been. For example, folders My documents, Work, Photos have been found and all they
have one parent folder, whose description has not actually been found on the disk, so its name is unknown and
therefore represented as $$$Folder58448. It may happen that the description of such folders was outside of the
scan area, so try to enlarge the region or scan the entire hard drive. If that does not help, most likely that the
description of the folder has been overwritten.
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Folder names like $ROOT58448 on FAT partitions mean that some folders have been found, but they cannot
be included into the folder structure for this FAT partition. Sometimes, such folders may contain other folder
structures.
If you recover a file, and it appears that the file contains wrong data, try to do the following:
Scan:
the logical disk, if the file has been just deleted.
the hard drive, if the data structure is damaged more seriously.
Search for the file to be restored on all found partitions and try to recover it from all found partitions.
Check each recovered file to ensure that it contains correct data. As soon as you found the partition from
which the file is recovered correctly, use this partitions to recover all other deleted files.
If there are several deleted files to be restored, you should use a file larger than 2KB to select the required
partition.
Cross-Linked Folders
Often R-Studio finds several FAT folder records that contain the same data. Such folders are called crosslinked. R-Studio marks such folders with an arrow mark:
R-Studio attributes the content of cross-linked folders to one folder called a target folder. When recovering, RStudio places the content to the target folder.
To view the list of cross-linked folders,
1
Control-click a cross-linked folder and select Cross Linked Folders on the contextual menu
>
or
Select the cross-linked folder and select Goto Target on the File menu
If Go Target is gray, this folder is already the target folder.
To set the target folder manually,
*
Control-click a cross-linked folder and select Set As Default Target on the contextual menu,
or
Select the cross-linked folder and select Set As Default Target on the File menu.
If Set As Default Target is gray, this folder is already the target folder.
Questionable Folders
Sometimes, R-Studio may find FAT records, which look like folders, but their content is invalid. For example,
file names have invalid characters, date, time, and size, or other file attributes may look strange. Please note that
R-Studio correctly recognizes localized names. R-Studio treats such records as folders, but does not analyze
their content and structure. You can manually scan such folders, but results may be unpredictable. Usually, such
scan reveals garbage.
R-Studio marks such folders with a question mark.
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To re-scan an object,
Select the questionable folder and select Rescan on the File menu.
4.3
R-Studio supports recovery of compressed files, alternative data streams, encrypted files, file security and
extended file attributes. If the R-Studio host OS and the file system of the disk you are going to save file to
support any particular extended information, it will be saved with the file, too. Otherwise, the extended
information will be saved as separate files with the same name as the restored file and extension showing the type
of the extended information. Below is a quick reference for the host OS and file system of the target drive.
Extended Information
Required target disk FS
Encrypted files
NTFS
Alternative data streams
NTFS
File security
NTFS
Extended file attributes
NTFS or FAT
4.4
Data Formats
You may enter data in all numerical fields either in sectors or in bytes. If there is no letters are after the number,
R-Studio assumes the numbers are in bytes.
Decimal numbers are entered as it is: 2372354
Hexadecimal numbers are entered as 0x23Fa67 or 23Fa67 hex.
The following case-insensitive notation is possible:
b
1 byte
kb
1 kb = 2^10=1024 bytes
mb
1 mb = 2^20=104857 bytes
gb
1 gb = 2^30=1073741824 bytes
tb
1 tb = 2^40=1099511627776 bytes
eb
1 eb = 2^50=1125899906842624 bytes
hex
A hexadecimal number
sec (sector) A number is in sectors
4.5
When deleting a file, Mac OS X deletes system BTree+ records describing the file. Therefore, it is hard to
recover such file directly. Those records may remain in:
1. The swap file (if the deleted file has been deleted recently).
2. In the journal (if the HFS+ journaling is on, and the deleted file has been CREATED recently)
Actually, if a file has been deleted, chances that the records would be found are small. To greatly increase the
chances to recover deleted files successfully , you may actively use scanning with enabled Known Files Types.
Note: All above is correct for intentionally deleted files. In case of a corrupted file system, HFS/HFS+ can be
recovered quite successfully.
When saving files with HFS+-specific attributes (resource fork, finder info, etc.) to a non-HFS+ disk, R-Studio
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saves them in the so-called AppleDouble format. When they are copied to an HFS+ disk under Mac OS X,
those attributes will be automatically restored.
4.6
Bad Sectors
Quite often, drives from which the data are to be recovered have bad sectors, or those sectors that are very
hard, even impossible, to read, mostly due to hardware problems. R-Studio tries to read such sectors several
times. The number of tries is specified either on the Settings/Bad Sectors dialog box, or on the Properties tab,
the Drive Control section, for each drive separately.
When R-Studio encounters such bad sectors while performing various tasks and they appear unreadable, it
treats them as follows:
Object images:
R-Studio fills the space in the image file where the bad sectors should be with the pattern specified in the Pattern
to fill bad blocks field on the Settings/Bad Sectors dialog box. Please note that R-Studio writes the pattern on
the image, not on the source drive.
Files
If Skip files with bad sectors on the Recovery dialog box is cleared, R-Studio fills bad sectors in the recovered
file with the pattern specified on the the Settings/Bad Sectors dialog box. Information about such files will
appear in the Log.
If Skip files with bad sectors on the Recovery dialog box is selected, R-Studio skips files with bad sectors and
displays their list on the Files with bad sectors dialog box when the recovery has been completed. You may
select files to immediately recover them or to mark for later recovery. You may also save this list to a text file.
Files with bad sectors dialog box
Bad sectors in the objects viewed/edited in the Text/hexadecimal editor are shown as filled with the pattern
specified in the Pattern to fill bad blocks field on the Settings/Bad Sectors dialog box.
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4.7
Memory Usage
You may see how much memory R-Studio uses while performing a data recovery task. This is especially useful
when scanning large disks on a computer with limited resources. You may specify memory control options on
the Memory usage tab in the R-Studio Settings.
To view memory usage,
1
>
R-Studio will show the total memory in your computer and how much memory it uses
Memory usage dialog box
Memory usage
Process Memory
System Memory
Physical
System Memory
Swap
4.8
Shows how much memory R-Studio uses. Limit shows how much memory your
system can virtually allocate to R-Studio. Actual memory allocation depends also
on the RAM and swap file sizes.
Shows how much RAM is in your system
Shows how much virtual memory is in your system
Forensic Mode
Note: This feature is available for the Technician version of R-Studio only!
When this mode is enabled, R-Studio will generate a forensic data collection audit log that can be presented at
court hearings. This log includes information about a hardware configuration on which the forensic data collection
takes place and MD5 for recovered files.
Note: A new log will be generated each time the hardware configuration is changed (a hard drive is connected/
disconnected, an external USB device is connected/disconnected, etc)
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Select Enable Forensic Mode on the Main tab of the Settings dialog box.
Each time you start file recovery, the Forensic Log Settings dialog box will appear.
Forensic Log Settings dialog box
Enter the required information and click the OK button to go to the Recovery dialog box.
While file recovery, R-Studio will create forensic data collection audit log in the specified folder. Below is an
example of such log.
*
*
*
*
*
#
+
159
*
*
*
*
*
*
+
*
*
*
*
160
*
*
*
*
*
*
+
*******************************************************************************************
Modification Date
2008-02-15 01:07:42
2008-01-19 05:47:48
MD5
1778568d4a8f7e372e159494a95ed542
Fi
Vi
Vi
161
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
6:
19130048
23097376
25473216
4491200
37777280
39615936
4931616
4950240
4950304
4950368
4950432
4975136
4975296
2009-04-30
2009-12-09
2009-12-25
2010-02-03
2010-02-03
2010-02-04
2010-02-19
2010-02-19
2010-02-19
2010-02-19
2010-02-19
2010-02-20
2010-02-20
03:47:24
22:15:42
21:07:28
00:11:08
23:45:04
00:17:24
20:35:48
20:38:34
20:39:24
20:41:00
20:42:54
19:18:54
19:45:24
710481dff181558bfc9b1bb222d47c56
Video/
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
Recove
4.9
Properties Tab
You may select the units in which the information on object sizes will be displayed. Some parameters can be
edited when the Debug mode is turned on on the Main dialog box of the R-Studio settings.
To select the units
1
1.Basic information
Device/disk type and subtype. Current R-Studio version supports the following types:
Disk, WORM, CDROM, Optical, Changer, Floppy, RAM Disk, LDM Partition, LDM
Component, LDM Volume
and subtypes:
Device, OS File, Physical Drive, Mount Point, Partition, Volume Set, Mirror, Stripe Set,
RAID5
Name
Device/disk name
Size
Device/disk size
Bus Type
This section shows available information on hard drives and logical disks. These properties depend on the
drive/disk type and appear only when applicable. Under Windows NT/2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008/7, an IDE
drive/disk may be represented as a SCSI device, that is why the SCSI Address section appears under these
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Appears for image files. An object name used by OS to access the device/disk.
Driver names (both internal and OS) used to access this drive/disk.
Drive/disk sector size
This section shows physical geometry for a hard drive. For a logical disk it shows the
physical geometry for a hard drive where the logical disk resides
Cylinders
Tracks Per Cylinder
Sectors Per Track
Sector Size
Device
Identification
Vendor
Product
Firmware
Bus
SCSI Address
Port Number
Path ID
Target ID
Lun
This section shows properties that control access (read and write) to hard drives and logical disks. They are set
to their optimal values and should be altered only if access problems appear.
More information...
Drive Control
Maximum transfer
Maximum data size that can be read or written during a single access to the drive. If
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there are problems with drive access, decrease the value of this property
I/O Unit
Data size read or written during a single access to the drive is a multiple value of this
property. If there are problems with drive access, decrease the value of this property
Buffer Alignment
Drive data transfer buffer is positioned at an address multiple value of this property. If
there are problems with drive access, increase the value of this property.
These three properties are set by OS drivers. If the drivers set incorrect values, problems may appear during
data transfer operations. You can alter them until data transfer becomes stable.
I/O Tries
Number of read/write tries during access to the drive. If there are bad sectors on the
drive, increase the value of this property. This may help to successfully read those
sectors. Sometimes, if the I/O Tries parameter is set too large and there are some
unreadable sectors on the hard drive, the hard drive-controller pair may refuse to
perform any successive read/write operations with the entire hard drive when it fails to
read/write such sectors. In this case, set this parameter to zero.
The default value is specified on the Settings (Bad Sectors) panel.
R-Studio treats bad sectors in the following way:
It reads a certain part of disk (predefined by Windows) and
If Default read attempts is set to 0, the entire part with bad sectors will be filled with
the specified pattern.
If Default read attempts is set to a non-zero value, R-Studio reads again that part
sector by sector, repeating the attempts the specified number of times. If R-Studio
still cannot read a bad sector, it fills the sectors with the specified pattern. In this
case only the bad sectors will be filled with the pattern, but that extremely slows the
disk read process.
For example, if you set Default read attempts to 1, a bad sector will be read 2 times.
4.Partition properties
A partition is a continuous area on a hard drive, characterized by its offset and size. There are partitions on
basic disks, dynamic disks, and recognized volumes and partitions. R-Studio treats regions like partitions.
More information...
Partition Offset
A compound volume is a union of several partitions or other disk objects. Each union type has its own rules,
unique for each compound volume type. Among compound volumes are: Volume Sets (RAIDs Level 0),
Mirrors (RAIDs Level 1), RAIDs5 (RAIDs Level 5), both physical and created by the user (Virtual Volume
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Main properties of compound volumes are parents (disk objects from which a compound volume is
created) and their order. These properties may be viewed in the Parents tab. For user-created compound
volumes these properties may be altered.
Raid Block Size
Data block size for compound volumes of RAID (Level 0-5) types
LDM disks and volumes are volumes controlled by Logical Disk Manager (LDM). They are represented on a
hard drive as a LDM database rather than partition tables. Under Windows 2000/XP/2003/Vista/2008/7,
LDM disks are also called Dynamic Disks.
More information...
Offset of Logical
Disk
Initial offset of a logical disk on a hard drive. For disks, initially formatted by LDM,
this value is often 31.5KB, for converted disks, it may be larger.
Supposed Parents
Supposed number of parent partitions for compound LDM volumes. If the LDM
Count
database is not damaged, the value of this property must be equal to the number of
parent objects in the Parents tab for the disk object.
LDM Host GUID
Global Unique Identifier of a computer system where this LDM disk group has been
created.
LDM DiskGroup GUID Global Unique Identifier of the LDM disk group.
LDM Disk GUID
Global Unique Identifier of the hard drive.
LDM Volume GUID
Global Unique Identifier of the volume.
LDM Disk ID
Local hard drive Identifier, unique within this LDM disk group.
LDM Partition ID
Local partition Identifier, unique within this LDM disk group.
LDM Component ID
Local component Identifier, unique within this LDM disk group.
LDM Volume ID
Local volume Identifier, unique within this LDM disk group.
LDM Disk AltName
Additional Alternative Name given by LDM to the hard drive.
LDM Disk DriveHint
Last name of the volume, under which is has been mounted in the system. May be
either a letter (C:, D:, etc.), or a mount point under Windows 2000/XP/2003/
Vista/2008/7.
7.File System Volume properties
A File System (FS) volume is a disk object where a certain, supported by R-Studio, file system is present.
There are two FS volume types: FS volume on a regular disk object and a recognized volume, found by a scan
process. FS volume properties depend on volume's file system and type.
7.1.NTFS Volume properties
These properties are present for all NTFS volumes and represent their main properties. For recognized
volumes, these values can be altered.
More information...
NTFS Information
Recognized NTFS
Regular volumes
Recognized volumes
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Cluster Size
These properties are present for all FAT volumes and represent their main properties. For recognized
volumes, these values can be altered.
More information...
FAT Information
Recognized FAT
FAT Bits (12,16,32)
Cluster Size
First Cluster Offset
Boot Directory
Cluster
Root Directory
Offset
Regular volumes
Recognized volumes
FAT type. 12 for the FAT12, 16 for the FAT16, 32 for the FAT32.
Cluster size for the FAT volume.
Offset of the first cluster from the start of the FAT volume.
(For FAT32 only.) Cluster number where the root directory starts on the FAT
volume where the logical disk resides.
(For FAT12 and 16 only.) Root directory offset from the start of the FAT volume.
Root Directory
Length
(For FAT12 and 16 only.) Root directory length for the FAT volume.
Offset for the first FAT table on the volume. Together with the Size of One Fat Table
property, is a most important property for a FAT volume. If this property is incorrect,
many files (especially fragmented ones) may be incorrectly recovered.
Size of one FAT table on the volume.
Sector size of the hard drive. This property is read from the boot sector of the FAT
volume and does not affect R-Studio operation.
Number of FAT copies on the FAT volume.
Active FAT table number for the FAT volume. Can be set to Disabled, Auto, 1, or 2. If
it is Disabled, R-Studio processes the volume as there is no FAT table present. This
may be useful if the volume has been reformatted and thus a new FAT table is created
and the old one is deleted. In this case, it is reasonable to recover files from the
previous volume without processing the new and irrelevant FAT table. All files will be
recovered as continuous byte chains beginning from their start cluster. Unfragmented
Major version
Minor version
Volume size
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These properties are present for all Ext2FS volumes and represent their main properties. For recognized
volumes, these values can be altered.
More information...
Ext2FS Information
Regular volumes
Recognized Ext2FS Recognized volumes
Block Size
Block size of Ext2FS file system. A block in the Ext2FS file system is similar to a
cluster in the FAT file system.
First SuperBlock
Offset of the first SuperBlock from the start of the Ext2FS volume.
Offset
Blocks Per Volume
INodes Per Volume
Creator OS
Major version
Minor version
Last Mount Time
Last Write Time
Last Check Time
Volume size
These properties are present for all recognized volumes, regardless of their file system type. They estimate
how reliable those volumes are recognized. This is useful for fast search for, and selection of, optimally
recognized volume to recover.
More information...
Parsed File Entries
Parsed Boot
Records
Number of files proving that this recognized volume existed. May have any nonnegative values. The main property characterizing the reliability of volume recognition.
The larger it, the higher probability that this recognized volume has file system
properties that have been correctly found.
Number of boot records proving that this recognized volume existed. May be 0 or 1.
This is the second important property characterizing the reliability of volume
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Estimated Size
recognition.
Estimated size of the recognized FS partition/volume. This property shows the most
probable size of the recognized FS partition/volume. Alternatively, Size and Partition
Size are set to the highest possible values in order to recover the maximum number of
files.
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The Technician version of R-Studio can work together with third-party hardware developed for in-depth data
recovery. Currently, the following devices are supported:
DeepSpar Disk Imager
5.1
Currently only the Windows version of R-Studio can work with DeepSpar Disk Imager directly. R-Studio
versions for Mac and Linux can load and process its images.
DeepSpar Disk Imager (DDI) is an HDD imaging device specifically built for data recovery from hard
drives with hardware issues. It greatly increases imaging speed, accuracy, and integrity of data retrieved from
such drives.
The main features that DDI provides when working with hard drives are the following:
Direct low-level access to a hard drive bypassing the computers BIOS.
Disabling specific drive read/write heads.
Disable SMART subsystem, Bad Sector Reallocation, and Read Look-Ahead
Read sector timeout controlled by Software/Hardware/PHY drive reset commands
Bit level analysis of corrupted data to filter out the read-write channel noise
Fully customizable multi-pass imaging
And many more others an advanced disk imager must have. You may learn more about DDI on its vendor site:
DeepSpar Disk Imager.
Viewing the drive map
A drive map shows the conditions for individual disk sectors. You may see which sectors are OK, bad, or
unstable.
To view the drive map,
*
Control-click the required hard drive/partition and select Show drive map... on the contextual menu,
>
A file map shows the conditions for individual file sectors. You may see which sectors are OK, bad, or unstable.
169
Control-click the required file and select Map of file... on the contextual menu,
>
To see more detailed information about a particular sector range, right click
select Information on the contextual menu.
Click the Open in Hex Editor button to open the selected block in the Text/hexadecimal editor.
VI
R-Studio Emergency
R-Studio Emergency is a tool that allows you to startup a computer with a damaged startup disk and recover
data stored on its hard drives. Then restored data can either be saved on its disk or transferred to a working
computer via a network.
The R-Studio Emergency version is a part of the R-Studio software package.
You may run this R-Studio Emergency version on a computer for which you have bought an RStudio license, and you may not transfer the licensed software to another computer.
R-Studio Emergency
Contact Information and Technical Support
Installing R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator
Creating Startup Disks
R-Studio Emergency Operation
Starting a Computer with the R-Studio Emergency Startup Disks
File Recovery
Searching for a File
Disk Scan
Disk Images
Technical Information
Network Drives
Properties and Text/Hexadecimal Viewer
Log
Hardware Compatibility List
R-Studio Emergency
6.1
170
6.2
If you are not sure whether you have such privileges, you almost certainly do not have them. Contact your system
administrator for assistance.
1.Run the setup file.
2.Follow the on-screen instructions.
You may create startup disks even before the installation ends.
6.3
A startup CD/DVD disc. You may create an ISO image, or write the disc directly from R-Studio Emergency
Startup Media Creator, if there is a CD/DVD recorder in your system.
or
A startup FAT/FAT32 removable device recognized by your system as a bootable one. The total available size
of the device should be more than 50 MB.
or
5 floppy disks.
Check the Hardware Compatibility List.
If you have problems with starting you computer up from the R-Studio Emergency startup disks, select
Configure startup media troubleshooting options on the Startup media type selection dialog box. Then the
Startup Media Troubleshooting Options dialog box will appear. You may configure these options to eliminate
those problems.
When R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator starts, its Welcome dialog box appears:
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click the Next button to see the list of all devices on which startup disks may be created.
Startup media type selection dialog box
To create a startup CD/DVD disc directly on your CD/DVD writer (if present):
1
Select the CD/DVD writer on the Startup media type selection dialog box and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the registration key on the R-Studio Emergency
Activation dialog box and click the Next button
R-Studio Emergency
172
Insert a blank CD/DVD disk into the CD/DVD recorder and click the Next button
Insert a CD/DVD disc dialog box
>
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the startup CD/DVD disc showing the
progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
Creating startup media dialog box
When R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes creating the startup CD/DVD disc, the RStudio Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Back button.
Select ISO Image for a startup CD/DVD on the R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator dialog box
and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the registration key on the R-Studio Emergency
Activation dialog box and click the Next button
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Select a place and file name for the ISO image of the startup CD/DVD and click the Save button
>
When R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes writing the file with the ISO image, the
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Next button.
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished dialog box
Create the startup CD/DVD using your favorite CD/DVD creation software
Load the created ISO image into the CD/DVD creation software. Consult documentation for the software
for details.
Select the removable device on the Startup media type selection dialog box and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the registration key on the R-Studio Emergency
Activation dialog box and click the Next button
Check that the FAT/FAT32-formatted device is ready and click the Next button
Ready to create startup media dialog box
>
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the startup USB disk showing the
progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
When R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes creating the startup device, the RStudio Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Next button.
R-Studio Emergency
174
Select Floppy Disk for the startup floppy disks on the R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator
dialog box and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the registration key on the R-Studio Emergency
Activation dialog box and click the Next button
Insert the first floppy disk and click the Next button on the Ready to create startup media dialog box
>
R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the first startup floppy disk showing
the progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
Insert the second floppy disk and click the OK button when the Please insert formatted diskette #2
into drive A: message will appear
>
When R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes creating the second startup floppy disk,
the R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Next button.
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Those options will help you if you have problems with starting you computer up from the R-Studiostartup disks.
Please, contact the R-Studio Technical Support Team for more information.
R-Studio Startup Media Troubleshooting Options dialog box
Select this checkbox if your system experiences problems with USB devices
during R-Studio Emergency startup.
Disables SCSI device support Select this checkbox if your system experiences problems with SCSI devices
during R-Studio Emergency startup.
Disables PCMCIA device
Select this checkbox if your system experiences problems with PCMCIA
support
devices during R-Studio Emergency startup.
Disables DMA for all IDE disk Select this checkbox if your system experiences problems with IDE disks during
drives
R-Studio Emergency startup.
IRQ polling mode
Select this checkbox to enable the IRQ polling mode to prevent locking the
system because a device generates too much interrupts for the system to handle.
PCI BIOS
Select an appropriate option if your system experiences problems with PCI
cards.
BIOS RAIDS
Select an appropriate option if your system experiences problems with RAIDs
built in the system board.
R-Studio Emergency
6.4
176
If you plan to use any external device, turn it on before starting the system.
If the motherboard in your computer supports the Serial ATA (SATA) devices, but IDE disks are also present,
only the SATA devices should be set to the Enhanced Mode in BIOS.
To start the computer with the R-Studio Emergency startup CD/DVD disc or any removable
device,
1
Make sure that the first startup device in the system BIOS is the CD/DVD drive or the removable device
Disable "Secure boot" in the system BIOS if your computer is certified to run Windows 8. Refer to your
system documentation for details.
2
Insert the R-Studio Emergency startup CD/DVD disc and start your computer
>
To start the computer with the R-Studio Emergency startup floppy disks,
1
Make sure that the first startup device in the system BIOS is A (Floppy)
Refer to your system documentation for details.
Insert the first startup floppy disk and start your computer
>
177
>
R-Studio Emergency will start and its Device/Disk panel will appear
Secure boot:
It may be impossible to start a Windows 8 certified computer with the R-Studio Emergency startup disk without
some additional actions. This happens because any computer should use a so-called "Secure boot" procedure to
comply with Windows 8 hardware certification from Microsoft. In brief, this procedure prevents computer from
booting into any operating system that isn't digitally signed with an appropriate digital signature. "Secure boot" is
claimed to prevent unauthorized modification of the boot sector by bootkits, viruses, trojans, and other malicious
software. To the date, only Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, and selected Linux distributions support this
feature. As a side effect, it also prevents most LiveCDs, rescue disks (R-Studio and R-Drive Image included),
and other OS from running.
Likely enough, the other requirement of Windows 8 hardware certification is to make it possible for the user to
disable the Secure boot procedure. Those settings can be done through the system BIOS under the Boot
options. Generally, it's enough to enable Legacy support in those options, but sometimes it may require additional
actions. Please, refer to your system documentation to learn more about disabling/enabling Secure boot.
When Secure boot is disabled, it should be possible to start the computer with the R-Studio Emergency startup
disk.
Please note that you should enable this feature back after using the startup disks because Windows 8 or Server
2012 may not start properly without the Secure boot feature enabled.
6.4.2
File Recovery
To recover files,
1
Select a partition on the Device/Disk panel on which the files to recover reside and press the Enter key
>
Select the file to recover on the Files View panel. Use the Tab key to switch between panes
Press the F2 key and specify the output folder on the Recover dialog box
External USB drives with the NTFS file system: R-Studio Emergency can save recovered files on
such disks if they are properly disconnected in a Windows system using the Safely Remove Hardware icon
in the system tray or while shutting Windows down.
Searching for a File
Mapping Network Drives
Viewing object properties
6.4.3
Searching for a File
To search for a file,
1
2
Select Find on the Tools menu (or press the Alt+F key)
Specify a file name or mask
Look at dialog box
Deleted files:
Existing files:
Files:
R-Studio Emergency
Folders:
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6.4.4
Disk Scan
To scan an object
1
Specify the required parameters on the Scan dialog box and press the Enter key
Scan dialog box
Start:
>
When an object is scanned, it may be searched for files, and found files may be recovered the same
way as for a regular object
Found objects:
Extra Found Files
Recognized1
Recognized2
Recognized3
Press the Alt+D key and select Save Scan Information on the Drive menu
Specify the output folder and file name on the Save Scan Information dialog box
Press the Alt+D key and select Open Scan Information on the Drive menu
Specify the folder and file name with the scan information on the Open Scan Information dialog box
Press the Alt+D key and select Delete Scan Information on the Drive menu
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6.4.5
Disk Images
Press the Alt+D key and select Create Plain Image File or Create Compressed Image File on the Drive
menu
Plain Image
Compressed Image
If this option is selected, R-Studio will create a simple exact copy of the
object. This image format is compatible with the previous versions of RStudio.
If this option is selected, R-Studio will create an image file compatible with
the images created by R-Drive Image, but incompatible with the previous
versions of R-Studio.
Specify the output folder and file name on the Create Image File dialog box
Press the Alt+D key and select Open Image File on the Drive menu
Specify the folder and file name with the image on the Open Image File dialog box
6.5
Network Drives
Properties and Text/Hexadecimal Viewer
Log
R-Studio Emergency
Contact Information and Technical Support
Installing R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator
Creating Startup Disks
R-Studio Emergency Operation
Starting a Computer with the R-Studio Emergency Startup Disks
File Recovery
Searching for a File
Disk Scan
Disk Images
Hardware Compatibility List
R-Studio Emergency
6.5.1
180
Select an object
To view an object
1
Select an object
6.5.2
Network Drives
On a dialog box with Map Network Drive, press the Alt+M key
>
If the network has a DHCP server, the computer will obtain an IP address automatically. A list of adapters
and their IP addresses will appear on the Network Adapters dialog box.
If the network does not have a DHCP server, select a network adapter on the Network Adapters dialog
box and press the F4 key. Enter the IP address and network mask and press the Enter button.
2
Enter the required information on the Map Network Drive message message
Server IP Address:
Server Share Name:
Login:
Password:
>
6.5.3
Log
181
6.6
Networking Devices
3c501 `EtherLink`
3c503 `EtherLink II`
3c505 `EtherLink Plus`
3c507 `EtherLink 16`
3c509/3c529 (MCA)/3c579 `EtherLink III`
3c515 ISA `Fast EtherLink`
3c590/3c900 series (592/595/597) `Vortex/
Boomerang`
3cr990 series `Typhoon`
AMD 8111 (new PCI lance)
AMD LANCE and PCnet (AT1500 and NE2100)
AMD PCnet32 PCI
AT1700/1720
Adaptec Starfire/DuraLAN
Ansel Communications EISA 3200
Apricot Xen-II on board Ethernet
Atheros L2 Fast Ethernet
Broadcom 440x/47xx ethernet
CS89x0
Cabletron E21xx
DECchip Tulip (dc2114x) PCI
Dave ethernet support (DNET)
Davicom DM910x/DM980x
Early DECchip Tulip (dc2104x) PCI
EtherExpress 16
EtherExpressPro support/EtherExpress 10 (i82595)
Generic DECchip & DIGITAL EtherWORKS PCI/
EISA
HP 10/100VG PCLAN (ISA, EISA, PCI)
HP PCLAN (27245 and other 27xxx series)
HP PCLAN+ (27247B and 27252A)
ICL EtherTeam 16i/32
Intel(R) PRO/100+
LP486E on board Ethernet
Myson MTD-8xx PCI Ethernet
R-Studio Emergency
182
NE2000/NE1000
NI5010
NI5210
NI6510
National Semiconductor DP8381x series PCI
Ethernet
OpenCores 10/100 Mbps Ethernet MAC
PCI NE2000 and clones support (see help)
RDC R6040 Fast Ethernet Adapter
RealTek RTL-8129/8130/8139 PCI Fast Ethernet
Adapter
RealTek RTL-8139 C+ PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter
SEEQ8005
SMC 9194
SMC EtherPower II
SMC Ultra
SMSC LAN9420 PCI ethernet adapter
SiS 900/7016 PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter
Silan SC92031 PCI Fast Ethernet Adapter driver
Sun Cassini
Sun GEM
Sun Happy Meal 10/100baseT
Sundance Alta
TI ThunderLAN
ULi M526x controller
VIA Rhine
WD80*3
Winbond W89c840 Ethernet
Zenith Z-Note
nForce Ethernet
Ethernet (1000 Mbit)
SATA/
183
Adaptec AHA1542
Intel(R) 82575/82576 PCI-Express Gigabit Ethernet
Adaptec AIC79xx U320
Intel(R) 82576 Virtual Function Ethernet
Adaptec AIC7xxx
Intel(R) PRO/1000 Gigabit Ethernet
Adaptec AIC7xxx Fast -> U160
Intel(R) PRO/1000 PCI-Express Gigabit Ethernet
Adaptec AIC94xx SAS/SATA
JMicron(R) PCI-Express Gigabit Ethernet
Adaptec I2O RAID
National Semiconductor DP83820
AdvanSys SCSI
New SysKonnect GigaEthernet
Always IN2000 SCSI
Packet Engines Hamachi GNIC-II
BusLogic SCSI
Packet Engines Yellowfin Gigabit-NIC
DMX3191D SCSI
QLogic QLA3XXX Network Driver Support
DTC3180/3280 SCSI
Realtek 8169 gigabit ethernet
EATA ISA/EISA/PCI (DPT and generic EATA/ SiS190/SiS191 gigabit ethernet
DMA-compliant boards)
SysKonnect Yukon2
Emulex LightPulse Fibre Channel Support
VIA Velocity
Future Domain 16xx SCSI/AHA-2920A
Ethernet (10000 Mbit)
Generic NCR5380/53c400 SCSI MMIO
Broadcom NetXtremeII 10Gb
Generic NCR5380/53c400 SCSI PIO
Chelsio 10Gb Ethernet
HP Smart Array SCSI driver
Chelsio Communications T3 10Gb Ethernet
HighPoint RocketRAID 3xxx/4xxx Controller
Chelsio Communications T4 Ethernet
IBM Power Linux RAID adapter
Cisco VIC Ethernet NIC Support
IBM ServeRAID
Intel(R) 10GbE PCI Express adapters
Initio 9100U(W)
Intel(R) PRO/10GbE
Initio INI-A100U2W
Mellanox Technologies 10Gbit Ethernet
Intel/ICP (former GDT SCSI Disk Array) RAID Myricom Myri-10G Ethernet
Controller
NetXen Multi port (1/10) Gigabit Ethernet NIC
LSI Logic Legacy MegaRAID Driver
Neterion X3100 Series 10GbE PCIe Server Adapter
LSI Logic Management Module
QLOGIC QLCNIC 1/10Gb Converged Ethernet
LSI Logic MegaRAID Driver
NIC Support
LSI Logic MegaRAID SAS RAID Module
QLogic QLGE 10Gb Ethernet Driver Support
LSI MPT Fusion SAS 2.0 Device Driver
S2IO 10Gbe XFrame NIC
Marvell 88SE64XX/88SE94XX SAS/SATA
ServerEngines' 10Gbps NIC - BladeEngine
NCR53c406a SCSI
Solarflare Solarstorm SFC4000/SFC9000-family
PAS16 SCSI
Sun Neptune 10Gbit Ethernet
PMC SIERRA Linux MaxRAID adapter
Tehuti Networks 10G Ethernet
PMC-Sierra SPC 8001 SAS/SATA Based Host
Token Ring driver support
Adapter driver
3Com 3C359 Token Link Velocity XL adapter
Promise SuperTrak EX Series
Generic TMS380 PCI
QLogic ISP4XXX host adapter family
Generic TMS380 Token Ring ISA/PCI adapter
QLogic QLA2XXX Fibre Channel Support
IBM Lanstreamer chipset PCI adapter
Qlogic FAS SCSI
IBM Olympic chipset PCI adapter
Qlogic QLA 1240/1x80/1x160 SCSI
R-Tools Technology Inc.
R-Studio Emergency
184
Compaq SMART2
Compaq Smart Array 5xxx
Mylex DAC960/DAC1100 PCI RAID Controller
Normal floppy disk
Promise SATA SX8
IEEE 1394 (FireWire) support
185
R-Studio Emergency
VII
186
R-Studio Agent Emergency is a tool that allows you to start a network computer with a damaged startup disk
and recover data stored on its hard drives. Then restored data can be transferred to a working computer via the
network.
It works very simple: Just start the computer with the R-Studio Agent Emergency startup disk(s) and, if
necessary, manually configure a network interface for R-Studio Agent Emergency. When started, the
computer and its hard drives can be accessed by R-Studio installed on another computer on the network.
Contact Information and Technical Support
Installing R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator
Creating Startup Disks
Starting a Computer with the R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Disk
Hardware Compatibility List
Disk Controllers
Network Cards
7.1
7.2
If you are not sure whether you have such privileges, you almost certainly do not have them. Contact your system
administrator for assistance.
1.Run the setup file.
2.Follow the on-screen instructions.
You may create startup disks even before the installation ends.
7.3
A startup CD/DVD disc. You may create an ISO image, or write the disc directly from R-Studio Emergency
Startup Media Creator, if there is a CD/DVD recorder in your system.
or
A startup FAT/FAT32 removable device recognized by your system as a bootable one. The total available size
R-Tools Technology Inc.
187
When R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator starts, its Welcome dialog box appears:
Welcome to R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator dialog box
Welcome dialog box
click the Next button to see the list of all devices on which startup disks may be created.
Startup media type selection dialog box
To create a startup CD/DVD disc directly on your CD/DVD writer (if present):
1
Select the CD/DVD writer on the Startup media type selection dialog box and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the R-Studio Agent registration key on the RStudio Agent Emergency Activation dialog box and click the Next button
Note: You should enter the registration key of R-Studio Agent, not R-Studio itself.
188
if you do not enter the registration key, R-Studio Agent Emergency will work in the Demo mode. You
may enter the key later when R-Studio Agent Emergency and R-Studio establish a connection
4
Insert a blank CD/DVD disk into the CD/DVD recorder and click the Next button
Insert media disc dialog box
189
>
R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the startup CD/DVD disc
showing the progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
Creating startup media dialog box
When R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes creating the startup CD/DVD disc,
the R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Back button.
Emergency
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the R-Studio Agent registration key on the RStudio Agent Emergency Activation dialog box and click the Next button
Note: You should enter the registration key of R-Studio Agent, not R-Studio itself.
if you do not enter the registration key, R-Studio Agent Emergency will work in the Demo mode. You
may enter the key later when R-Studio Agent Emergency and R-Studio establish a connection.
4
Select a place and file name for the ISO image of the startup CD/DVD and click the Save button
>
When R-Studio Bootable Startup Media Creator finishes writing the file with the ISO image, the
Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
R-
You may either exit R-Studio Bootable Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Back button.
190
Create the startup CD/DVD using your favorite CD/DVD creation software
Load the created ISO image into the CD/DVD creation software. Consult documentation for the software
for details.
To create a startup FAT/FAT32 removable device
1
Select the removable device on the Startup media type selection dialog box and click the Next button
Read and accept the License Agreement and enter the registration key on the R-Studio Agent
Emergency Activation dialog box and click the Next button
Check that the correct FAT/FAT32-formatted device is selected and click the Next button
Confirm device selection dialog box
>
R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the startup USB disk showing
the progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
When R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator finishes creating the startup device, the
R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear
You may either exit R-Studio Emergency Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create
another startup media by clicking the Back button.
191
Select Floppy Disk for the startup floppy disk on the R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media
Creator dialog box and click the Next button
Enter the registration information and number on the Registration dialog box and click the Next button
If you leave all the field blank, R-Studio Agent Emergency will work with the Demo-version limitations
4
Insert the floppy disk and click the Next button on the Insert floppy dialog box
Insert floppy dialog box
>
R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator will start creating the startup floppy disk
showing the progress on the Creating startup media dialog box
Creating startup media dialog box
192
Insert the second floppy disk and click the OK button when the Please insert formatted diskette #2
into drive A: message will appear
When R-Studio Startup Media Creator finishes creating the startup floppy disk, the R-Studio Agent
Emergency Startup Media Creation is Finished message will appear. You may either exit R-Studio
Startup Media Creator by clicking the Finish button or create another startup media by clicking the
Back button.
7.4
We recommended that you print out this help page and have the hardcopy on hand while you are
performing this action.
Before you start the computer you should be aware that your network has a DHCP server or you
know the computer's IP address and network mask.
If there is a non-IDE disk controller in your system, or you plan to use network disks or external hardware
devices, first check the Hardware Compatibility List.
If you plan to use any external device, turn it on before starting the system.
If the motherboard in your computer supports the Serial ATA (SATA) devices, but IDE disks are also present,
only the SATA devices should be set to the Enhanced Mode in BIOS.
To start the computer with the R-Studio Agent Emergency startup disks
1
Make sure that the first startup device in the system BIOS is the device from which you plan to start
your computer (a CD/DVD drive or A (Floppy))
Disable "Secure boot" in the system BIOS if your computer is certified to run Windows 8. Refer to your
system documentation for details. Refer to your system documentation for details.
2
Insert the R-Studio Agent Emergency startup CD/DVD disc, a removable device, or the first floppy disk
and start your computer
>
R-Studio Agent Emergency will start and its prompt will appear
If you start your computer with floppy disks, you'll see prompts to insert a next floppy disk.
----------------------------------------------------------------Booting R-Studio Emergency. Please wait...
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The computer running R-Studio Agent Emergency will be assigned an IP address automatically
A prompt with a computer address will appear. You need to remember it to access the computer via
network.
If your network does not have a DHCP server
3. A prompt to configure another interface, gateway, or to finish configuring the interfaces will appear. Enter
gw, enter the IP address of the gateway, and press Enter.
------------------------[ List of Interfaces ]-------------------------------Name
IP Address
NETMASK
Vendor
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------re0
Unconfigured
RealTek 8139C+
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------# Enter interface name, 'gw' for default gateway or just press ENTER to finish
#>re0
# Enter IP address and optional NETMASK delimited by space
#>192.168.0.10 255.255.255.0
------------------------[ List of Interfaces ]-------------------------------Name
IP Address
NETMASK
Vendor
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------re0
192.168.0.10
255.255.255.0
RealTek 8139C+
gw
Unconfigured
Default gateway
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------# Enter interface name, 'gw' for default gateway or just press ENTER to finish
#>gw
# Enter default gateway IP Address
#>192.168.0.1
------------------------[ List of Interfaces ]-------------------------------Name
IP Address
NETMASK
Vendor
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------re0
192.168.0.10
255.255.255.0
RealTek 8139C+
4.
>
194
gw
192.168.0.1
Default gateway
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------# Enter interface name, 'gw' for default gateway or just press ENTER to finish
#>
Press Enter to finish configuring the interfaces, or enter the name of the next interface to configure.
R-Studio Agent Emergency will show a prompt that is ready to accept connections
* R-Studio Agent started and ready to accept connections...
* You may press ENTER to start to remote R-Studio...
When you need to connect R-Studio and R-Studio Agent Emergency over the Internet, it may be necessary
to start the connection from the computer where R-Studio Agent Emergency is running.
To connect to R-Studio's computer,
1
Press the Enter key and enter the IP address of the computer where R-Studio is running as
IPaddress:port.
* R-Studio Agent started and ready to accept connections...
* You may press ENTER to start connection to remote R-Studio...
# Enter R-Studio IP address or just press ENTER to cancel> 192.168.0.25:80
The default port is 8080, and you don't have to specify it.
2
>
When the connection is established successfully, R-Studio Agent Emergency will notify you about
this.
* R-Studio Agent started and ready to accept connections...
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7.5
Disk Controllers
Network Cards
R-Studio Agent Emergency
Contact Information and Technical Support
Installing R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Media Creator
Creating Startup Disks
Starting a Computer with the R-Studio Agent Emergency Startup Disk
7.5.1
Disk Controllers
R-Studio Agent Emergency is based on the FreeBSD 5.3 kernel and supports devices from the list published
at http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.3R/hardware-i386.html.
*: Supported in the floppy version
Disk controllers
IDE/ATA controllers ( ata driver) *
The adapters supported by the aic driver include:
Adaptec AHA-154xB
Adaptec AHA-154xC
Adaptec AHA-154xCF
Adaptec AHA-154xCP
Adaptec AHA-1640
Adaptec AHA-174x in 154x emulation mode
DTC 3290 SCSI controller in 1542 emulation mode
Tekram SCSI controllers in 154x emulation mode
The ahb driver supports the following SCSI host adapters:
Adaptec AHA-1740
Adaptec AHA-1742
Adaptec AHA-1740A
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Adaptec AHA-1742A
The ahc driver supports the following SCSI host adapter chips and SCSI controller cards:
197
Adaptec 39160
Adaptec 3985
Adaptec 4944UW
NEC PC-9821Xt13 (PC-98)
NEC RvII26 (PC-98)
NEC PC-9821X-B02L/B09 (PC-98)
NEC SV-98/2-B03 (PC-98)
Many motherboards with on-board SCSI support
The ahd driver supports the following:
Adaptec AAC-364
Adaptec SCSI RAID 2120S
Adaptec SCSI RAID 2130S
Adaptec SCSI RAID 2200S
Adaptec SCSI RAID 2410SA
Adaptec SCSI RAID 2810SA
Adaptec SCSI RAID 5400S
Dell CERC SATA RAID 2
Dell PERC 2/Si
Dell PERC 2/QC
Dell PERC 3/Si
Dell PERC 3/Di
Dell PERC 320/DC
HP NetRAID 4M
The adv driver supports the following SCSI controllers:
AdvanSys ABP510/5150
AdvanSys ABP5140
AdvanSys ABP5142
AdvanSys ABP902/3902
AdvanSys ABP3905
AdvanSys ABP915
AdvanSys ABP920
AdvanSys ABP3922
AdvanSys ABP3925
AdvanSys ABP930, ABP930U, ABP930UA
AdvanSys ABP960, ABP960U
AdvanSys ABP542
AdvanSys ABP742
AdvanSys ABP842
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AdvanSys ABP940
AdvanSys ABP940UA/3940UA
AdvanSys ABP940U
AdvanSys ABP3960UA
AdvanSys ABP970, ABP970U
AdvanSys ABP752
AdvanSys ABP852
AdvanSys ABP950
AdvanSys ABP980, ABP980U
AdvanSys ABP980UA/3980UA
MELCO IFC-USP (PC-98)
RATOC REX-PCI30 (PC-98)
@Nifty FNECHARD IFC-USUP-TX (PC-98)
The adw driver supports SCSI controllers including:
AdvanSys ABP940UW/ABP3940UW
AdvanSys ABP950UW
AdvanSys ABP970UW
AdvanSys ABP3940U2W
AdvanSys ABP3950U2W
The bt driver supports the following BusLogic MultiMaster ``W'', ``C'', ``S'', and ``A'' series and compatible
SCSI host adapters:
BusLogic BT-445C
BusLogic BT-445S
BusLogic BT-540CF
BusLogic BT-542B
BusLogic BT-542B
BusLogic BT-542D
BusLogic BT-545C
BusLogic BT-545S
BusLogic/BusTek BT-640
BusLogic BT-742A
BusLogic BT-742A
BusLogic BT-747C
BusLogic BT-747D
BusLogic BT-747S
BusLogic BT-757C
BusLogic BT-757CD
BusLogic BT-757D
BusLogic BT-757S
BusLogic BT-946C
BusLogic BT-948
BusLogic BT-956C
BusLogic BT-956CD
BusLogic BT-958
BusLogic BT-958D
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200
Mylex DAC960P
Mylex DAC960PD / DEC KZPSC (Fast Wide)
Mylex DAC960PDU
Mylex DAC960PL
Mylex DAC960PJ
Mylex DAC960PG
Mylex DAC960PU / DEC PZPAC (Ultra Wide)
Mylex AcceleRAID 150 (DAC960PRL)
Mylex AcceleRAID 250 (DAC960PTL1)
Mylex eXtremeRAID 1100 (DAC1164P)
RAIDarray 230 controllers, aka the Ultra-SCSI DEC KZPAC-AA (1-ch, 4MB cache), KZPAC-CA (3-ch,
4MB), KZPAC-CB (3-ch, 8MB cache)
All major firmware revisions (2.x, 3.x, 4.x and 5.x) are supported, however it is always advisable to upgrade to
the most recent firmware available for the controller. Compatible Mylex controllers not listed should work, but
have not been verified.
Note: Booting from these controllers is supported. EISA adapters are not supported.
Controllers supported by the mly driver include:
201
53C810
53C810A
53C815
53C820
53C825A
53C860
53C875
53C875J
53C885
53C895
53C895A
53C896
53C1510D
The following add-on boards are known to be supported:
53C810
53C810A
53C815
53C825
53C825A
53C860
53C875
53C876
53C895
53C895A
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53C896
53C897
53C1000
53C1000R
53C1010-33
53C1010-66
53C1510D
The SCSI controllers supported by sym can be either embedded on a motherboard, or on one of the
following add-on boards:
Adaptec 2920/A
Future Domain SCSI2GO
Future Domain TMC-18XX/3260
IBM SCSI PCMCIA Card
ICM PSC-2401 SCSI
MELCO IFC-SC
RATOC REX-5536, REX-5536AM, REX-5536M, REX-9836A
Note that the Adaptec 2920C is supported by the ahc driver.
Cards supported by the isp driver include:
ISP1000
PTI SBS440
ISP1020
ISP1040
PTI SBS450
Qlogic 1240
Qlogic 1020
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Qlogic 1040
Qlogic 1080
Qlogic 1280
Qlogic 12160
Qlogic 2100
Qlogic 2102
Qlogic 2200
Qlogic 2202
Qlogic 2204
Qlogic 2300
Qlogic 2312
PTI SBS470
Antares P-0033
Controllers supported by the amd driver include:
Alpha-Data AD-PCS201
I-O DATA CBSC16
Adaptec AIC-7110 Parallel to SCSI interfaces ( vpo driver)
The following controllers are supported by the ida driver:
204
IBM ServeRAID 3H
ServeRAID 4L/4M/4H
ServeRAID Series 5
ServeRAID 6i/6M
The following controllers are supported by the mpt driver:
Tekram DC-315 PCI Ultra SCSI adapter without BIOS and internal SCSI connector
Tekram DC-315U PCI Ultra SCSI adapter without BIOS
Tekram DC-395F PCI Ultra-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS and 68-pin external SCSI connector
Tekram DC-395U PCI Ultra SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
Tekram DC-395UW PCI Ultra-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
Tekram DC-395U2W PCI Ultra2-Wide SCSI adapter with flash BIOS
For the Tekram DC-310/U and DC-390F/U/UW/U2B/U2W/U3W PCI SCSI host adapters, use the sym
driver.
The wds driver supports the WD7000 SCSI controller.
7.5.2
Network Cards
R-Studio Agent Emergency is based on the FreeBSD 5.3 kernel and supports devices from the list published
at http://www.freebsd.org/releases/5.3R/hardware-i386.html.
*: Supported in the floppy version
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Ethernet NICs
Adapters supported by the sf driver include:
Novell NE2100 *
Novell NE32-VL *
Isolan AT 4141-0 (16 bit)
Isolan BICC
Isolink 4110 (8 bit)
Diamond HomeFree
Digital DEPCA
Hewlett Packard Vectra 486/66XM
Hewlett Packard Vectra XU
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Also supported are adapters working with the pcn driver. The lnc driver runs these in compatibility mode, thus
the pcn driver should be preferred.
SMC 83c17x (EPIC)-based Ethernet NICs (tx driver)
The ed driver supports the following Ethernet NICs:
207
MELCO LGH-98, LGY-98, LGY-98-N (110pin), IND-SP, IND-SS (flags 0x400000) (PC-98)
MELCO LGY-PCI-TR
MELCO LPC-T/LPC2-T/LPC2-CLT/LPC2-TX/LPC3-TX/LPC3-CLX
NDC Ethernet Instant-Link
NEC PC-9801-77, PC-9801-78 (flags 0x910000) (PC-98)
NEC PC-9801-107, PC-9801-108 (flags 0x800000) (PC-98)
National Semiconductor InfoMover NE4100
NetGear FA-410TX
NetVin 5000
Network Everywhere Ethernet 10BaseT PC Card
Networld 98X3 (flags 0xd00000) (PC-98)
Networld EC-98X, EP-98X (flags 0xd10000) (PC-98)
Novell NE1000/NE2000/NE2100
PLANEX ENW-8300-T
PLANEX EN-2298-C (flags 0x200000) (PC-98)
PLANEX EN-2298P-T, EN-2298-T (flags 0x500000) (PC-98)
PLANEX FNW-3600-T
RealTek 8029
SMC Elite 16 WD8013
SMC Elite Ultra
SMC EtherEZ98 (flags 0x000000) (PC-98)
SMC
WD8003E/WD8003EBT/WD8003S/WD8003SBT/WD8003W/WD8013EBT/WD8013W
clones
Socket LP-E
Surecom EtherPerfect EP-427
Surecom NE-34
TDK LAK-CD031, Grey Cell GCS2000 Ethernet Card
Telecom Device SuperSocket RE450T
VIA VT86C926
Winbond W89C940
C-Bus, ISA, PCI and PC Card devices are supported.
Adapters supported by the rl driver include:
and
208
Trendware TE100-PCIE *
The vr driver supports VIA Technologies Rhine I, Rhine II, and Rhine III based Fast Ethernet adapters
including:
D-Link DFE530-TX
Hawking Technologies PN102TX
AOpen/Acer ALN-320
The sis driver supports Silicon Integrated Systems SiS 900 * and SiS 7016 * based Fast Ethernet adapters
and embedded controllers, as well as Fast Ethernet adapters based on the National Semiconductor
DP83815 (MacPhyter) chip. Supported adapters include:
209
The ste driver supports Sundance Technologies ST201 based Fast Ethernet adapters and embedded
controllers including:
D-Link DFE-530TXS
D-Link DFE-550TX
Adapters supported by the sk driver include:
Compaq Netelligent 10
Compaq Netelligent 10 T PCI UTP/Coax
Compaq Netelligent 10/100
Compaq Netelligent 10/100 Dual-Port
Compaq Netelligent 10/100 Proliant
Compaq Netelligent 10/100 TX Embedded UTP
Compaq Netelligent 10/100 TX UTP
Compaq NetFlex 3P
Compaq NetFlex 3P Integrated
Compaq NetFlex 3P w/BNC
The dc driver provides support for the following chipsets: *
DEC/Intel 21143
ADMtek AL981 Comet, AN985 Centaur, ADM9511 Centaur II and ADM9513 Centaur II
ASIX Electronics AX88140A and AX88141
Conexant LANfinity RS7112 (miniPCI)
Davicom DM9009, DM9100, DM9102 and DM9102A
Lite-On 82c168 and 82c169 PNIC
Lite-On/Macronix 82c115 PNIC II
Macronix 98713, 98713A, 98715, 98715A, 98715AEC-C, 98725, 98727 and 98732
Xircom X3201 (cardbus only)
210
The following NICs are known to work with the dc driver at this time:
211
Belkin F5U011/F5U111
CATC Netmate
CATC Netmate II
SmartBridges SmartLink
The kue driver supports Kawasaki LSI KL5KLUSB101B based USB Ethernet adapters including:
3Com 3c19250
3Com 3c460 HomeConnect Ethernet USB Adapter
ADS Technologies USB-10BT
AOX USB101
ATen UC10T
Abocom URE 450
Corega USB-T
D-Link DSB-650C
Entrega NET-USB-E45, NET-HUB-3U1E
I/O Data USB ETT
Kawasaki DU-H3E
LinkSys USB10T
Netgear EA101
Peracom USB Ethernet Adapter
SMC 2102USB, 2104USB
The axe driver supports ASIX Electronics AX88172 based USB Ethernet adapters including:
212
The rue driver supports RealTek RTL8150 based USB Ethernet adapters including:
Adaptec ANA-6944/TX
Cogent EM100FX and EM440TX
Corega FastEther PCI-TX
D-Link DFE-500TX
DEC DE435, DE425, DEC DE450, and DEC DE500
ELECOM LD-PCI2T, LD-PCITS
I-O DATA LA2/T-PCI
SMC Etherpower 8432, 9332 and 9334
ZNYX ZX3xx
Controllers and cards supported by the fe driver include:
213
3COM 3C507
AT&T EN100
AT&T Starlan 10
AT&T Starlan Fiber
Intel EtherExpress 16
RACAL Interlan NI5210
The ep driver supports Ethernet adapters based on the 3Com 3C5x9 Etherlink III Parallel Tasking chipset,
including:
3Com 3C1 CF
3Com 3C509-TP, 3C509-BNC, 3C509-Combo, 3C509-TPO, 3C509-TPC ISA
3Com 3C509B-TP, 3C509B-BNC, 3C509B-Combo, 3C509B-TPO, 3C509B-TPC ISA
3Com 3C529, 3C529-TP MCA
3Com 3C562/3C563 PCMCIA
3Com 3C569B-J-TPO, 3C569B-J-COMBO CBUS
3Com 3C574-TX, 3CCFE574BT, 3CXFE574BT, 3C3FE574BT PCMCIA
3Com 3C579-TP, 3C579-BNC EISA
3Com 3C589, 3C589B, 3C589C, 3C589D, 3CXE589DT PCMCIA
3Com 3CCFEM556B, 3CCFEM556BI PCMCIA
3Com 3CXE589EC, 3CCE589EC, 3CXE589ET, 3CCE589ET PCMCIA
3Com Megahertz 3CCEM556, 3CXEM556, 3CCEM556B, 3CXEM556B PCMCIA
3Com OfficeConnect 3CXSH572BT, 3CCSH572BT PCMCIA
Farallon EtherMac PCMCIA
The el driver supports the 3Com 3c501 8bit ISA Ethernet card.
The xl driver supports the following hardware:
3Com 3c900-TPO *
3Com 3c900-COMBO *
3Com 3c905-TX *
3Com 3c905-T4 *
3Com 3c900B-TPO *
3Com 3c900B-TPC *
3Com 3c900B-FL *
3Com 3c900B-COMBO *
3Com 3c905B-T4 *
3Com 3c905B-TX *
3Com 3c905B-FX *
3Com 3c905B-COMBO *
3Com 3c905C-TX *
3Com 3c980, 3c980B, and 3c980C server adapters
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3Com 3CR990-TX-95 *
3Com 3CR990-TX-97 *
3Com 3cR990B-TXM *
3Com 3CR990SVR95 *
3Com 3CR990SVR97 *
3Com 3cR990B-SRV *
The bge driver provides support for various NICs based on the Broadcom BCM570x family of Gigabit
Ethernet controller chips, including the following:
215
216
217
Index
-AAdvanced Data Recovery
Advanced RAID 5 Layouts
Advanced RAID 6 Layout
Apple RAIDs
100
26
78
78
-BBad Sectors
156
Bad Sectors settings
Default read attempts
8
Pattern to fill bad blocks
8
Set for all drives
8
Basic File Recovery
14
Blocks order
69
Broken File Name
Prompt:
61
Rename and change all invalid symbols to:
Broken File Name options
Change all invalid symbols to
14
Edit broken symbols only
14
File name
14
New name
14
Button
Clear All
156
Mark
156
Recover
156
Save to File
156
Select All
156
Buttons
Add
27
Advanced
27
Auto Detect
103
Choose Variants
103
Code pages
134
Connect to Remote
128
Create Image
4, 50
Create Region
4, 48
File Mask
25
Find Next
21
Find Previous
21
Find/Mark
21
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-C61
Index
Contextual menu
Find Previous
21
Find Previous Versions of the File
23
Find Template Signature Next
134
Find Template Signature Previous
134
Find/Mark
21
Go Target
153
Log Filter...
26
Mark
14, 21
Mark All
14
Merge Down
27
Merge Down All
27
Merge Selected
27
Open Drive Files
14
Open Scan Information
27
Preview
21, 23
Recover
14, 21
Recover All Files
59
Recover Marked
14
Remove All Scanned Information
27
Remove Region
48
Save File Names to File
62
Save Log to File...
26
Save Scan Information
27
Save sub folders
62
Scan
27
Select From
134
Select To
134
Set As Default Target
153
Toggle Bookmark
134
Unmark
14
Unmark All
14
View/Edit
134
Write BOM
62
Contextualt menu
Map of file
168
Show drive map...
168
Create menu
Add Missing Disk
69
Create Exclusive Region
49
Create Region
48
Create Virtual Mirror
69
Create Virtual RAID5
69
Create Virtual Stripe Set
69
Create Virtual Volume Set
69
Show drive map...
168
Creating and saving your own RAID configuration
64, 69
218
-DData Formats
155
Data Recovery Issues
153
Data Recovery on HFS/HFS+ File System
155
Data recovery over network
123
Connect to Remote Computer
128
Data Recovery Using R-Studio
13
DDI Drive Map
168
DeepSpar Disk Imager
168
Description Files for RAID Configuration
109
Dialog box
Forensic Log Settings
157
Save File Names
62
Dialog boxes
Broken File Name
14
Connect to R-Studio
129
Create Exclusive Region
49
Create Region
48
Edit Block RAID Layout Presets
64
Edit RAID Order
69
Edit User's File Types
38
File mask
25
File Types
27
Files with bad sectors
156
Fill
134
Find/Mark
21
Go to
134
Memory Usage
157
New RAID Order
69
Open Scan Information File
27
Please configure R-Studio Agent for Mac
124
Please configure R-Studio Agent for Windows
125
Preset name
64
RAID Parameters Detection
103
Recover
14, 59, 61
R-Studio Agent Preferences
124
Save Scan Information File
27
Scan
27
Scan Information
27
Search
134
Settings
8
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219
Dialog boxes
There is not enough space on the disk
Waiting for remote connection
129
Disk scan
4, 27
Drive map
168
Drive menu
Connect to Remote
128
Create Image
50
Open Drive Files
14
Open Image File
50
Open Scan Informaiton
27
Recover All Files
59
Remove Scan Informaiton
27
Save Scan Informaiton
27
Scan
27
-EEdit menu
Bookmarks
134
Fill
134
Find
134
Find Next
134
Find Previous
134
Find Template Signature Next
134
Find Template Signature Previous
134
Save Changes
134
Enable Forensic Mode
157
Event log
26
Exclusive Region
49
Exclusive Region options
Offset
49
Start
49
Exclusive Regions
49
Extended Information Recovery
155
61
14
Index
Files
8
Information
8
Maximum messages in the Event Log
Network
8
Partition
8
Recover
8
Save log to file
8
Success
8
Warning
8
103
-HHelp menu
Disable All Hints
4
Show All Hints
4
Hidden Attribute
Keep
61
Prompt
61
Remove
61
Image
50
Image Options (Advanced)
Pattern to fill bad blocks
50
Read attempts
50
Image options (Main)
Byte to byte image
50
Compressed image (R-Drive Image compatible)
50
Compression ratio
50
Create scan information file
50
Estimated size
50
Image file name
50
Image password
50
Image split size
50
IntelligentScan Technology
152
Introduction to R-Studio
1
-K-
-LLinux LVM
101
Log options
Disk
8
Error
8
File name
8
File System
8
-M-
-I-
220
-NNAT 129
Nested and Non-Standard RAID Levels
87
-OOffset
69
-PPanels
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Panels
Files
14
Folders
14
Log
14, 26
Main
4
Panes
Bookmarks
134
Data Interpreter
134
Find Results
134
Template
134
Pattern Example I 144
Pattern Example II 147
Previewing files
23
Properties tab
Active FAT copy
161
Block Size
161
Blocks Per Volume
161
Boot Directory Cluster
161
Buffer Alignment
161
Bus Type
161
Cluster size
161
Creator OS
161
Device Identification
161
Drive Control
161
Drive Type
161
Estimated Size
161
Ext2FS Information
161
Fat Bits (12,16,32)
161
FAT Information
161
First Cluster Offset
161
First FAT Offset
161
First SuperBlock Offset
161
I/O Tries
161
I/O Unit
161
Index Block Size
161
INodes Per Volume
161
Int13 Drive Number
161
Int13 Extension Version
161
Last Check Time
161
Last Mount Time
161
Last Write Time
161
LDM Component ID
161
LDM Disk AltName
161
LDM Disk DriveHint
161
LDM Disk GUID
161
LDM Disk ID
161
LDM DiskGroup GUID
161
LDM Host GUID
161
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LDM Partition ID
161
LDM Volume GUID
161
LDM Volume ID
161
Major version
161
Maximum transfer
161
MFT Mirror Position
161
MFT position
161
MFT record size
161
Minor version
161
Name
161
NTFS Information
161
Number of FAT Copies
161
Offset of Logical Disk
161
OS object
161
Parsed Boot Records
161
Parsed File Entries
161
Partition number
161
Partition Offset
161
Partition Size
161
Partition Type
161
Physical Drive Geometry
161
Raid Block Size
161
Recognized Ext2FS
161
Recognized FAT 161
Recognized NTFS
161
Root Directory Length
161
Root Directory Offset
161
R-Studio driver
161
SCSI Address
161
Sector Size
161
Size
161
Size of One FAT Table
161
Supposed Parents Count
161
Volume size
161
-QQuestionable folders
153
-RRAID 0
66
RAID 1
66
RAID block size
69
RAID consistency
105
RAID for HP Servers
75
RAID Parameter Detection
103
Index
222
62
223
Settings
Bad Sectors
8
Known File Types
8
Log
8
Main
8
Startup Media Troubleshooting Options
170
Storage Pools
97
Storage Spaces
97
Stripe Sets
66
Syntaxis of a Description File for RAID Configurations
105
System Options
Enable Write
8
Mode
8
System Requirements
3
-TTabs
Parents
69
Properties
161
Technical Information and Troubleshooting
152
Text/hexadecimal editor
134
Allocation
134
ANSI/OEM/UNICODE/UNICODE+
134
Direct
134
Save to Hexadecimal File
134
Std
134
Unlimited
134
Tools
Connect to
129
Tools menu
File mask
25
Find
21
Find All
21
Find Next
21
Find Previous
21
Goto
134
Mark All
14
Save Changes
134
Save to Binary File...
134
Save to Hexadecimal File
134
Select All
134
Unmark All
14
-VView menu
ANSI 134
Arrange
14
Bookmarks View
134
Contents Columns
14
Data Interpreter View
134
Device View
4
Event Log
4, 14
Files panel
14
Find results
4
Folders panel
14
Log panel
14
OEM
134
Parents Tab
4
Properties
4, 161
Properties Tab
4
Properties View
4, 134
Scan Information Tab
4
Sectors View
134
Status bar
4, 14
Template View
134
Toolbar
4, 14, 134
Toolbar Button Text
4, 14
UNICODE
134
UNICODE+
134
Virtual volume sets and RAIDs
64
Volume sets and RAIDs
64
Volume Sets, Stripe Sets, and Mirrors
66
-WWindow
RAID consistency check
105
RAID Sequence
78
Working with RAID 6 Presets
Reed-Solomon
71
Vertical Xor
71
Working with RAID6 (Double Xor) Presets
73
Working with the Third-Party Hardware
168