![]() In this question I wrongly assumed that my hard disk was partitioned using MBR instead of GPT.TestDisk is a free and opensource, command-line data recovery tool that is used to recover data from deleted or lost partitions. Data was not overwritten (install didn't proceed), but the partition table was lost. I guess my problem comes from my ignorance of what are primary partitions, as opposed to logical or extended partitions.įor the record, the partition table was lost at the beginning of a Ubuntu install in which I asked to replace the current Linux partition with an LVM partition. I suppose it's because a maximum of only 4 primary partition tables is tolerated? I am supposed to flag the partitions which I would like to recover with one of those letters I tried flagging all partitions as primary, but Testdisk indicates it's a "bad structure". I have no idea which are the primary bootable (*), primary (P), logical (L), extended (E) or deleted (D) partitions. ![]() Here is what Testdisk shows after a quick scan of the Intel/PC partitions: The Linux install contains four partitions: a swap partition, the / ext4 partition, the /home ext4 partition and a tiny unallocated partition. The disk contains a dual boot Windows 8 along a Linux OS. ![]() I'm trying to recover a partition table with testdisk.
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