Sponsored Content
Operating Systems Solaris Can I put my own tags in a partition table Post 302271040 by bharu_sri on Tuesday 23rd of December 2008 03:32:11 PM
Old 12-23-2008
I m new to solaris and I dn't have a clear understanding. Thank you for ur advice
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Solaris

recovery partition table from fdisk?

I have two disks on a sun blade 100. I just installed a solaris8 on the first disk. The installation was successful. But the problem is now I lost all data / partition on my second hard disk. The possible reason could be: 1. I used default web start install. During the installation I didn't... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: motor98
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

resizing the partition table

Host 1 ------- Part Tag Flag Cylinders Size Blocks 0 root wm 0 - 1911 18.56GB (1912/0/0) 38913024 1 swap wu 1912 - 5434 34.19GB (3523/0/0) 71700096 2 backup wm 0 - 14086 136.71GB ... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: sriny
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

modify a predefined partition table on Solaris

I want to modify a predefined partition on Solaris. This predefined partion has 51 GB. I want to partition it as two partition. One is 5G, another one is about 46 GB. I want to use these commands: #format specify disk #partition # modify The system told me that ' Cannot modify disk... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: duke0001
1 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

distributed hash table operations(GET,PUT,TRANSFER) implementation

Hi, i want to implement hash table (put, get and transfer operations) using c in unix. so give some nice infromation on how to write my code. (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kaleab
1 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Bash: Advice put data in a table

Hi I get some differents output from a bash script. My goal is to sort them in a kind of table, something like: Actually the table can change and I don't care about the shape, I'm just looking if there's a well know way to put the output of a script in a table or if someone has his own best... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Dedalus
2 Replies

6. Slackware

Help me!!!! - Slackware 12 Issue - Invalid Partition table

Hi All, I am a linux newbie. After working with my loveable FEDORA 10 for months, i found it a bit slower. I wanted to try with slackware this time. I already had Windows XP and fedora in my 80 GB SATA disk. Now i allotted 15 GB ( SWAP + / + /home/usr ). During my installation i encountered no... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: beinthemiddle
5 Replies

7. Solaris

Manually editing partition table

I'm manually editing the partition table purely for experimenting. I did prtvtoc /dev/dsk/c1t0d0s2 > /tmp/prtvtoc I'm trying to split up partition 5 to make partition 6. I'm running into a cylinder boundary error on partition 6. Any clues? # vi /tmp/prtvtoc "/tmp/prtvtoc" 23 lines, 769... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: adelsin
1 Replies

8. SCO

Backup MBR an Partition Table

hi How can I backup MBR an Partition Table of SCO 5.0.6? (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ccc
7 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Put repeated values into a table

Hi all, I have blocks of records like the following, each block ends in = in a new line, I want tabularize the entire output. The pattern is the same in every block although not all types are there in every block. For example gine3 is absent in the second block but present first and third. ... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: ritakadm
7 Replies

10. Programming

How do I partition an Oracle 11g Table?

Hello, I have a database called "audit_database" and I want to create two tables. Table 1 = Table 1 Table 2 = Audit I want to partition the Audit table into partitions grouped by month. I'm not familiar with table partitioning but doing some reading online shows that it can be done but... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: bbbngowc
4 Replies
scrounge-ntfs(8)					    BSD System Manager's Manual 					  scrounge-ntfs(8)

NAME
scrounge-ntfs -- helps retrieve data from corrupted NTFS partitions SYNOPSIS
scrounge-ntfs -l disk scrounge-ntfs -s disk scrounge-ntfs [-m mftoffset] [-c clustersize] [-o outdir] disk start end DESCRIPTION
scrounge-ntfs is a utility that can rescue data from corrupted NTFS partitions. It writes the files retrieved to another working file system. Certain information about the partition needs to be known in advance. The -l mode is meant to be run in advance of the data corruption, with the output stored away in a file. This allows scrounge-ntfs to recover data reliably. See the 'NOTES' section below for recover info when this isn't the case. OPTIONS
The options are as follows: -c The cluster size (in sectors). When not specified a default of 8 is used. -l List partition information for a drive. This will only work when the partition table for the given drive is intact. -m When recovering data this specifies the location of the MFT from the beginning of the partition (in sectors). If not specified then no directory information can be used, that is, all rescued files will be written to the same directory. -o Directory to put rescued files in. If not specified then files will be placed in the current directory. -s Search disk for partition information. (Not implemented yet). disk The raw device used to access the disk which contains the NTFS partition to rescue files from. eg: '/dev/hdc' start The beginning of the NTFS partition (in sectors). end The end of the NTFS partition (in sectors) NOTES
If you plan on using this program sucessfully you should prepare in advance by storing a copy of the partition information. Use the -l option to do this. Eventually searching for disk partition information will be implemented, which will solve this problem. When only one partition exists on a disk or you want to rescue the first partition there are ways to guess at the sector sizes and MFT loca- tion. See the scrounge-ntfs web page for more info: http://memberwebs.com/swalter/software/scrounge/ AUTHOR
Stef Walter <stef@memberwebs.com> scrounge-ntfs June 1, 2019 scrounge-ntfs
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:56 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy