Kubuntu release: 19.04
How is Kubuntu installed: Dual-booted
KDE version: KDE Plasma 5.15.4
Grub version: Grub2
Other OS: Windows 10 Professional
PC Info:
Laptop or Desktop: Laptop
BIOS setting: UEFI, Secure Boot disabled
CPU: Intel Core i3-5015U @ 2.10GHz (4 cores)
GPU: Intel Corporation HD Graphics 5500 (rev 09)
RAM: 8GB (7.7GB available, 330MB Shared)
Optical drvies: 1 HITACHI LG DATA STORAGE DVD+/-RW, 8X
HD:
Internal: 1TB Internal SATA HDD
External (In this case): 1 1TB WD Internal HDD (NTFS) attached via USB3 SATA Drive enclosure
Though I've used Linux before, my experience with it is still VERY NEW, especially when it comes to this...
I've used this external drive several times on a desktop that runs Windows 10 almost exclusively.
Any files written to the disk via Windows 10 on any device were easily able to be copied back off the disk with no recovery effort of any kind.
Any files written to the disk using the linux laptop were corrupted, and required me to run "chkdsk x: /r" to run recovery.
On stage 4 (Looking for bad clusters in user file data...) literally every single file written by linux has resulted in "Windows replaced bad clusters in file (file number) of name (file name)"
I've run it multiple times, recovering several files, then interrupting the process to copy those recovered files.
This is a VERY tedious process, and I'm on the last legs, with some rather large files left on the disk. Currently chkdsk claims it's 1% of the way through current stage 4 (having been running for DAYS), and current ETA is over 444 hours (not a typo) for maybe 100-200GB worth of data at most.
When I attached the drive, Linux mounted it automatically, and gave zero errors or troubles, when writing the files to the drive.
When copying files off the drive in Windows, the only files that did not require chkdsk stage 4 recovery were those written to the disk by Windows. All other files are encountering logical cluster corruption (eg FS corruption that is not physical damage)
Is there a specific way I'm supposed to mount NTFS partitions to ensure that writing to the disk in Linux does not corrupt those files during writing? I'd really like to avoid this problem in the future, as waiting more than a week to recover from this kind of corruption is something no one has time for.
Thanks in advance for any help.
How is Kubuntu installed: Dual-booted
KDE version: KDE Plasma 5.15.4
Grub version: Grub2
Other OS: Windows 10 Professional
PC Info:
Laptop or Desktop: Laptop
BIOS setting: UEFI, Secure Boot disabled
CPU: Intel Core i3-5015U @ 2.10GHz (4 cores)
GPU: Intel Corporation HD Graphics 5500 (rev 09)
RAM: 8GB (7.7GB available, 330MB Shared)
Optical drvies: 1 HITACHI LG DATA STORAGE DVD+/-RW, 8X
HD:
Internal: 1TB Internal SATA HDD
External (In this case): 1 1TB WD Internal HDD (NTFS) attached via USB3 SATA Drive enclosure
Though I've used Linux before, my experience with it is still VERY NEW, especially when it comes to this...
I've used this external drive several times on a desktop that runs Windows 10 almost exclusively.
Any files written to the disk via Windows 10 on any device were easily able to be copied back off the disk with no recovery effort of any kind.
Any files written to the disk using the linux laptop were corrupted, and required me to run "chkdsk x: /r" to run recovery.
On stage 4 (Looking for bad clusters in user file data...) literally every single file written by linux has resulted in "Windows replaced bad clusters in file (file number) of name (file name)"
I've run it multiple times, recovering several files, then interrupting the process to copy those recovered files.
This is a VERY tedious process, and I'm on the last legs, with some rather large files left on the disk. Currently chkdsk claims it's 1% of the way through current stage 4 (having been running for DAYS), and current ETA is over 444 hours (not a typo) for maybe 100-200GB worth of data at most.
When I attached the drive, Linux mounted it automatically, and gave zero errors or troubles, when writing the files to the drive.
When copying files off the drive in Windows, the only files that did not require chkdsk stage 4 recovery were those written to the disk by Windows. All other files are encountering logical cluster corruption (eg FS corruption that is not physical damage)
Is there a specific way I'm supposed to mount NTFS partitions to ensure that writing to the disk in Linux does not corrupt those files during writing? I'd really like to avoid this problem in the future, as waiting more than a week to recover from this kind of corruption is something no one has time for.
Thanks in advance for any help.
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