Re: Recovering shift deleted data

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Hello,

I've gave it up. For my happynes, my sister recorded fireworks too, so that's solved.

Thanks for all your help and links. Happy new year to you all and take care.

Best regards

Vojta.

Dne 04. 01. 22 v 19:35 Linux for blind general discussion napsal(a):
Tim here.  I'm unfamiliar with how the dictaphone connects or what
file-system it exposes (most likely a FAT filesystem rather than an
EXT filesystem).  If it is a FAT drive, you might have "testdisk" in
your repo that should allow you to undelete files from a FAT drive.
There's a pretty good write-up of steps here

https://linuxconfig.org/data-recovery-of-deleted-files-from-the-fat-filesystem

that might help you out in that case.

The last time I had to recover deleted files on a FAT drive, I
believe part of the deletion process obliterated the first letter of
the filename, so you had to provide that when restoring (so a file
named "vojita.txt" would show up in old directory listings as
"?ojita.txt" and you'd have to provide the "v" at the beginning).

Hope this helps,

-tim

On January  1, 2022, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Hello,

and what to recovery data from my dictaphone? I have Olympus LSP4
and I taked files from it by CTRL X. Some people told me about
Recuva for Windows to recovery it.

But now, I am on my Raspberry, emailing to you. May I turn off my
raspberry and write from another computer?

Thanks, Vojta.

Dne 01. 01. 22 v 20:29 Linux for blind general discussion napsal(a):
Tim here again. Yes, if your filesystem is ext4, extundelete is
the tool you want.  For best results, reboot into a live ISO/CD
image and install it there, leaving your RPi drive untouched.
This will minimize the chance that installing extundelete
overwrites the data you want to preserve.

-tim

On January  1, 2022, Linux for blind general discussion wrote:
Hello, I have ext4, yes.

Vojta.

Dne 01. 01. 22 v 20:18 Linux for blind general discussion
napsal(a):
I'm guessing/hoping the partition that has your deleted file has
an ext4 filesystem. You should be able to recover the lost file
using extundelete, although if you write anything at all to the
SD, it will become less likely that your file will be
recoverable. It seems that other filesystems make it more
difficult, if not impossible to recover deleted files.

~Kyle

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