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Full Discussion: Recover deleted partition
Homework and Emergencies Emergency UNIX and Linux Support Recover deleted partition Post 302545537 by Chrisdot on Monday 8th of August 2011 06:06:46 PM
Old 08-08-2011
Well, that was standard intel RAID controler (onboard) I used to set up RAIDs on two 7200.12s.

I got Ubuntu live CD and may have any other distro - knoppix is no problem.

Under ubuntu I see whole hdd without any partition (under gparted, whole space is visible as 'unallocated'), do not know how to look into partition tables.

"Um, how do you set up two different raid volumes on two disks?"
After entering Intel Raid Option ROM I have 4 possibilities:
1. Create RAID Volume
2. Delete RAID Volume
3. Set disk to non-raid
4. Exit

After selecting 1. Create RAID Volume I can choose which RAID (1 or 0), how much space, and which HDDs.
If I make RAID0 sized 100GB I can select '1. Create RAID Volume' again and create another RAID Volume as long as space is available.
That way I created 2 Volumes (RAID0: 100GB, and RAID1 ~ 415GB).

On RAID0 I had about 4 partitions (linux home, linux root, boot, windows 7) and on RAID1 I had only 1 partition (ntfs).

Now I used 'testdisk' to find my lost partitions - without success. It found only 2 linux partitions without any files.
I do not want to recover any files from RAID0 - it is not possible.
But recovering from RAID1 should be easy...
 

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raidstart(8)						      System Manager's Manual						      raidstart(8)

NAME
raidstart, raidstop, - command set to manage md devices. SYNOPSIS
raidstart [options] <raiddevice>* raidstop [options] <raiddevice>* DESCRIPTION
RAID devices are virtual devices created from two or more real block devices. This allows multiple disks to be combined into a single filesystem, possibly with automated backup and recovery. Linux RAID devices are implemented through the md device driver. If you're using the /proc filesystem, /proc/mdstat gives you informations about md devices status. Currently, Linux supports linear md devices, RAID0 (striping), RAID1 (mirrroring), and RAID4 and RAID5. For information on the various lev- els of RAID, check out: http://ostenfeld.dk/~jakob/Software-RAID.HOWTO/ for new releases of the RAID driver check out: ftp://ftp.fi.kernel.org/pub/linux/daemons/raid/alpha Avaible commands are : mkraid : configures (creates) md (RAID) devices in the kernel, banding multiple devices into one. raidstart : activates (starts) an existing 'persistent' md device raid0run : activates old nonpersistent RAID0/LINEAR md devices raidstop : turns off an md device, and unconfigures (stops) it By default, a systems RAID configuration is kept in /etc/raidtab, which can configure multiple RAID devices. All of these tools work similiarly. If -a (or --all) is specified, the specified operation is performed on all of the RAID devices men- tioned in the configuration file. Otherwise, one or more RAID devices must be specified on the command line. For example: raid0run -a Starts all of the 'old' RAID0 RAID devices specified in /etc/raidtab. If only /dev/md1 should be started, the following command should be used instead: raidstart /dev/md1 OPTIONS
-a, --all Apply the command to all of the configurations specified in the config file. -c, --configfile filename Use filename as the configuration file (/etc/raidtab is used by default). -h, --help Displays a short usage message, then exits. -V, --version Displays a short version message, then exits. NOTES
The raidtools are derived from the md-tools and raidtools packages, which were originally written by Marc Zyngier, Miguel de Icaza, Gadi Oxman, Bradley Ward Allen, and Ingo Molnar. BUGS
no known bugs. SEE ALSO
raidtab(5), raid0run(8), raidstop(8), mkraid(8) raidstart(8)
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