My freebsd partition changed by Windows chkdsk (Leslie Jensen)

Manish Jain bourne.identity at hotmail.com
Sun Nov 4 11:37:55 UTC 2012






> Date: Sun, 4 Nov 2012 16:41:45 +0530
> From: bourne.identity at hotmail.com
> To: leslie at eskk.nu
> CC: freebsd-questions at freebsd.org
> Subject: Re: My freebsd partition changed by Windows chkdsk (Leslie Jensen)
> 
> 
> On 04-Nov-12 13:17, Leslie Jensen wrote:
> >
> >
> > Manish Jain 2012-11-02 19:18:
> >
> >> 1) Boot from your FreeBSD CD/DVD, enter the slice editor and
> >> change the type of your FreeBSD slice back to 165. Do not press Q.
> >> Press W instead. Conform with Yes to the warning, and then press
> >> Ctrl+Alt+Del to abort the installation.
> >>
> >> 2) Boot from your FreeBSD CD/DVD again, and run boot0cfg -B in an
> >> emergency shell.
> >>
> >> <My legal disclaimer comes here, but do let me know if you get lucky>
> >>
> >> I hope my message sounds less cryptic now. I personally don't have
> >> anything against running chkdsk or fixmbr, AS LONG AS I have backed
> >> up the important sectors.
> >>
> >> Regards
> >>
> >> Manish Jain
> >> bourne.identity at hotmail.com
> >>
> >> _______________________________________________
> >> freebsd-questions at freebsd.org mailing list
> >> http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions
> >> To unsubscribe, send any mail to
> >> "freebsd-questions-unsubscribe at freebsd.org"
> >
> >
> > I've attached the disk to a running Freebsd system 8.3.
> >
> > Which program do you reefer to when you write slice editor?
> >
> > I do not need to be able to boot from the disk. I just need to be able
> > to read it and copy my /home to another disk.
> >
> > Thanks
> >
> > /Leslie
> >
> 
> 
> Hello Leslie,
> 
> I think you are unclear with FreeBSD terminology. What Windows calls 
> primary partitions are called slices in FreeBSD. You can have a maximum
> of 4 slices per disk, as I had mentioned earlier. One of the slices may 
> optionally be marked as what Windows calls an extended partition. The 
> extended partition can be broken up into many partitions ("logical 
> drives" in Windows terminology). Your C: drive is a slice in FreeBSD 
> terms. If you have a D: drive too, that - in all likelihood - is a 
> partition in FreeBSD terminology.
> 
> FreeBSD's terminology is in general much clearer and a lot more mature 
> than you would find on any other OS, particularly Windows.
> 
> The first step that you have to perform when installing FreeBSD is to 
> enter the slice editor and create a slice for FreeBSD. When you press on 
> "Begin a standard installation", the slice editor is the first 
> application that is automatically presented to you.
> 
> FreeBSD uses the term partition to refer to the divisions it creates 
> inside its slice for the /, /usr, /var, /tmp filesystems.
> 
> Now I fail to understand what you mean by a "running FreeBSD system". I 
> thought your FreeBSD installation had been rendered unbootable by 
> chkdsk. If you can indeed boot into FreeBSD successfully, then you 
> shouldn't be having any problem copying out whatever data you want.
> 
> The steps I had suggested were meant to make your FreeBSD installation 
> bootable. As long as your FreeBSD slice is marked as NTFS (filesystem ID 
> 7) instead of FFS (filesystem ID 165) in the MBR, no application or OS 
> can read any data from that slice, at least AFAIK.
> 
> 
> Regards
> 
> Manish Jain
> +91-99620-10329

Just in case you are not aware how to change the filesystem type in the slice editor,

highlight your FreeBSD slice and press T. Make sure you enter 165 as the filesystem

type, and then press W and confirm the change. Then press  Ctrl+Alt+Del and reboot.





Regards

 

Manish Jain

bourne.idenity at hotmail.com


 		 	   		  


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