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Author Topic: Accidental HD overwrite - help!  (Read 2368 times)

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Offline slayer

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Re: Accidental HD overwrite - help!
« on: May 20, 2009, 11:56:51 PM »
I always got into the habit of writing down the details of partitions and associated information in a book for all my HDs. This really wasn't much use apart from being able to salvage the individual partitions later, the only sure way I suppose is to save the rdb information in a file. But who has the discipline to do these things as a natural course of action.

(Before you do the below you're going to have to unprep and reprep your HD)

In this situation what I would do is simply quick format the entire drive as one large partition, hopefully it was originally partitioned as per manufacturers specs otherwise that could introduce concerns about HD structure and set the correct filesystem on it too.

Then use DiskSalv to another HD with enough space for the process. It also has a guess Filesystem if you weren't sure about the filesystem and quick formatted it in something you guessed.

Too bad there wasn't a program that could find all the partitions then write all the information to the rdb.

Sorry this answer is somewhat vague and does rely on someone with ample knowledge of dos and workbench etc but like anything like this it takes far too much energy to write a thorough walkthrough, these days I normally say, this is too hands on to tackle

Perhaps someone can point you in a better direction :D
~Yes I am a Kiwi, No, I did not appear as an extra in \'Lord of the Rings\'~
1x AmigaOne X5000 2.0GHz 2gM RadeonR9280X AOS4.x
3x AmigaOne X1000 1.8GHz 2gM RadeonHD7970 AOS4.x
 

Offline slayer

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Re: Accidental HD overwrite - help!
« Reply #1 on: May 21, 2009, 01:49:54 AM »
But hey, you have a Blizzard 2060!

I only have 1 A1260 and 1 PPC 060 Blizzard

as for your rendition of Amiga reconstruction, I understand perfectly the procedures you are conveying :D
~Yes I am a Kiwi, No, I did not appear as an extra in \'Lord of the Rings\'~
1x AmigaOne X5000 2.0GHz 2gM RadeonR9280X AOS4.x
3x AmigaOne X1000 1.8GHz 2gM RadeonHD7970 AOS4.x
 

Offline slayer

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Re: Accidental HD overwrite - help!
« Reply #2 on: May 21, 2009, 11:01:41 PM »
That's strange. What happens when you disconnect your harddrive? You do get a insert disk screen? Can't you hold down the mouse buttons for your early startup screen and boot from your floppy that way? Perhaps your floppy is not the floppy you once knew? check it on your A1000? Hmmm, speaking of your A1000 even though I own 3 I've never booted one up, can't you place this 2500 HD inside, boot from your A1000 HD as per normal and then fix your ill 2500 HD?

Sorry if I am missing something obvious here


edit:
Just pondering, perhaps you need to remove your flash component until you get the system back on its feet, you're trying to work with too many variables here...
~Yes I am a Kiwi, No, I did not appear as an extra in \'Lord of the Rings\'~
1x AmigaOne X5000 2.0GHz 2gM RadeonR9280X AOS4.x
3x AmigaOne X1000 1.8GHz 2gM RadeonHD7970 AOS4.x
 

Offline slayer

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Re: Accidental HD overwrite - help!
« Reply #3 on: May 22, 2009, 03:40:13 AM »
almost correct, 0 would only useful if you have a drive set at a negative value and you'd like to keep all nagative level drives from booting before it, of course it would work that way just seems strange to me ;-) , you usually increase the value to give a drive preference...

boot first 1
boot second or other units bootable but not given any preference 0

the floppy is hardwired 10 I believe

only time I use negative values is for the actual priority settings of tasks running in the AmigaOS useful when something that is running that HOGS the cpu... like fryingpan for example...

good luck with the HD endevours, I'm trying to wind down on a Friday afternoon, not that it's been very busy, just got back from home doing the dishes from last night lol
~Yes I am a Kiwi, No, I did not appear as an extra in \'Lord of the Rings\'~
1x AmigaOne X5000 2.0GHz 2gM RadeonR9280X AOS4.x
3x AmigaOne X1000 1.8GHz 2gM RadeonHD7970 AOS4.x
 

Offline slayer

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Re: Accidental HD overwrite - help!
« Reply #4 on: May 24, 2009, 10:14:51 PM »
I knew of that program too but I didn't think there was any point since he overwrite the rdb not corrupted it - In my experience none of these programs ever do what you want them to do... in short, though none of us ever learn, the only safe way is to back it up a bit like custom bootblocks are to nondos floppy diskettes

@save2600

good to see you back on the road, wiser for it? ;-)
~Yes I am a Kiwi, No, I did not appear as an extra in \'Lord of the Rings\'~
1x AmigaOne X5000 2.0GHz 2gM RadeonR9280X AOS4.x
3x AmigaOne X1000 1.8GHz 2gM RadeonHD7970 AOS4.x