OK, please somebody be able to help me.
I have a 500 gb drive that was split into 5 equal partions of about 100 gb. I had XP Media Center installed on the first partition, and I wanted to reformat and add (dual boot) Kubuntu 7.1 at the same time. I researched what to do and thought I was following instructions. I booted to Windows XP install disk, deleted what was my boot partition, and made a new partition that was about half of the 100 gb C: partition.
I installed XP MC and the other 4 partitions remained intact with all of my B/U on them (along with other valuable data). Then I decided to add Kubuntu, I rebooted with one of the 2 cds in the drive, it did not boot. So I tried the quick DVD, it booted and asked if I wanted to install Kubuntu, I selected yes, it came up with a hard drive C:, I selected it thinking I was still safe...I was waiting for a windows like partition manager to pop up allowing me to create a linux and swap partition with the unused space I cleared in the previous step.
After a few minutes, when I saw that it was creating a swap partition I panicked and stopped the process, ejecting the CD and restarting. Needless to say I am left with no windows, no bootable drive, no partitions. I ran analyse with Testdisk and it spit out this:
Disk /dev/sdc - 500 GB / 465 GiB - CHS 60801 255 63
Current partition structure:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
1 P Linux 0 1 1 60557 254 63 972864207
2 E extended LBA 60558 0 1 60801 80 63 3908898
No partition is bootable
5 L Linux Swap 60558 1 1 60801 80 63 3908835
I've researched my options a bit, and it looks like if these partition recovery programs don't work I might try recreating the original partions without formating. Thus, telling the computer where to find the data that should still be there. The good news is I think I can guess the sizes as they were all split up evenly and there ended up being 8mb of unpartitioned free space left after I created the 5 partitions. Or I have an Identical drive which has the same partions sizes and I could use that as a reference.
What are the risks of deleting the Linux partions and trying to reestablish the old NTFS partitions, can I keep guessing at the sizes until I get it right, and what program is best for this?
Should I try a different recovery option such as Gpart or another suggestion?
Did I screw it up by ejecting Kubuntu half way through? Was Kubuntu hosing my partition table or was all this part of a normal setup?
I don't blame Kubuntu, I blame myself for not buying a new $40 80gb drive for the OSs (RECOMMENDED) and for not stopping when I reached a point where I was unsure.
Any help will be appreciated in the highest, thanks.
I have a 500 gb drive that was split into 5 equal partions of about 100 gb. I had XP Media Center installed on the first partition, and I wanted to reformat and add (dual boot) Kubuntu 7.1 at the same time. I researched what to do and thought I was following instructions. I booted to Windows XP install disk, deleted what was my boot partition, and made a new partition that was about half of the 100 gb C: partition.
I installed XP MC and the other 4 partitions remained intact with all of my B/U on them (along with other valuable data). Then I decided to add Kubuntu, I rebooted with one of the 2 cds in the drive, it did not boot. So I tried the quick DVD, it booted and asked if I wanted to install Kubuntu, I selected yes, it came up with a hard drive C:, I selected it thinking I was still safe...I was waiting for a windows like partition manager to pop up allowing me to create a linux and swap partition with the unused space I cleared in the previous step.
After a few minutes, when I saw that it was creating a swap partition I panicked and stopped the process, ejecting the CD and restarting. Needless to say I am left with no windows, no bootable drive, no partitions. I ran analyse with Testdisk and it spit out this:
Disk /dev/sdc - 500 GB / 465 GiB - CHS 60801 255 63
Current partition structure:
Partition Start End Size in sectors
1 P Linux 0 1 1 60557 254 63 972864207
2 E extended LBA 60558 0 1 60801 80 63 3908898
No partition is bootable
5 L Linux Swap 60558 1 1 60801 80 63 3908835
I've researched my options a bit, and it looks like if these partition recovery programs don't work I might try recreating the original partions without formating. Thus, telling the computer where to find the data that should still be there. The good news is I think I can guess the sizes as they were all split up evenly and there ended up being 8mb of unpartitioned free space left after I created the 5 partitions. Or I have an Identical drive which has the same partions sizes and I could use that as a reference.
What are the risks of deleting the Linux partions and trying to reestablish the old NTFS partitions, can I keep guessing at the sizes until I get it right, and what program is best for this?
Should I try a different recovery option such as Gpart or another suggestion?
Did I screw it up by ejecting Kubuntu half way through? Was Kubuntu hosing my partition table or was all this part of a normal setup?
I don't blame Kubuntu, I blame myself for not buying a new $40 80gb drive for the OSs (RECOMMENDED) and for not stopping when I reached a point where I was unsure.
Any help will be appreciated in the highest, thanks.
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