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Full Discussion: A simple dummy question
Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory A simple dummy question Post 302094463 by Perderabo on Friday 27th of October 2006 06:03:19 PM
Old 10-27-2006
Do not do anything else to the disk until you have a plan of action. You might try File Scavenger or contact Que-Tek, who makes File Scavenger, about their recovery services. There are other recovery programs and recovery services. You can google for them. But trying a recovery tool, then trying a recovery service is your only reasonable path.

And then look into a backup package. You need to have backups of your files. A disk can drop dead at any point in time.
 

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FSTYP(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 						  FSTYP(8)

NAME
fstyp -- determine filesystem type SYNOPSIS
fstyp [-l] [-s] special DESCRIPTION
The fstyp utility is used to determine the filesystem type on a given device. It can recognize ISO-9660, Ext2, FAT, NTFS, and UFS filesys- tems. The filesystem name is printed to the standard output as, respectively, cd9660, ext2fs, msdosfs, ntfs, or ufs. Because fstyp is built specifically to detect filesystem types, it differs from file(1) in several ways. The output is machine-parsable, filesystem labels are supported, the utility runs sandboxed using capsicum(4), and does not try to recognize any file format other than filesystems. These options are available: -l In addition to filesystem type, print filesystem label if available. -s Ignore file type. By default, fstyp only works on regular files and disk-like device nodes. Trying to read other file types might have unexpected consequences or hang indefinitely. EXIT STATUS
The fstyp utility exits 0 on success, and >0 if an error occurs or the filesystem type is not recognized. SEE ALSO
file(1), capsicum(4), glabel(8), mount(8) HISTORY
The fstyp command appeared in FreeBSD 11.0. AUTHORS
The fstyp utility was developed by Edward Tomasz Napierala <trasz@FreeBSD.org> under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation. BSD
January 14, 2015 BSD
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