Hello All,
I accidentally deleted my RAID 5 dynamic volume while reinstalling Windows Server 2003. The deletion occurred while doing the routine disk configuration portion of a Windows installation where the user has the option of creating/deleting partitions and formatting. I had not been booting from the RAID nor was I trying to setup a bootable RAID. The RAID was/is just for storage. I accidentally deleted the volume using "Delete Partition". I am currently trying to run 3rd party recovery programs from inside Windows Server 2003 (which is up and running normally). As I am new to RAID technology I don't want to try rebuilding since I don't know if it will work and I don't want to further damage the RAID by making more changes to it.
The program I am currently running is called "DiskInternals RAID Recover 2.8." I find it interesting that while My Computer does not see the RAID at all (which isn't surprising since I deleted the partition) the recovery program sees the RAID and has assigned the correct drive letter (R which I had manually assigned via Windows Disk Manager when I first setup the RAID. Anyway, the first attempt at recovery was not successful because while the program did find about 7,000 files they all had weird names and they seemed to be some sort of system/hidden/back-end files that users don't normally see. I wondered if it may have been due to telling the program the RAID was in NTFS format. I had to specify a file system to start the deep scan, but I didn't actually remember the RAID file system, so I chose the format used for Windows Server 2003. Now, I am rerunning a deep scan and recovery with the file system specified as FAT. The program has currently found 134,962 files and it is 26% complete. Don't know what to make of that...
Does anyone have experience with something like this? Any advice about better ways to recover? Is recovery futile?
Best Regards,
James
I accidentally deleted my RAID 5 dynamic volume while reinstalling Windows Server 2003. The deletion occurred while doing the routine disk configuration portion of a Windows installation where the user has the option of creating/deleting partitions and formatting. I had not been booting from the RAID nor was I trying to setup a bootable RAID. The RAID was/is just for storage. I accidentally deleted the volume using "Delete Partition". I am currently trying to run 3rd party recovery programs from inside Windows Server 2003 (which is up and running normally). As I am new to RAID technology I don't want to try rebuilding since I don't know if it will work and I don't want to further damage the RAID by making more changes to it.
The program I am currently running is called "DiskInternals RAID Recover 2.8." I find it interesting that while My Computer does not see the RAID at all (which isn't surprising since I deleted the partition) the recovery program sees the RAID and has assigned the correct drive letter (R which I had manually assigned via Windows Disk Manager when I first setup the RAID. Anyway, the first attempt at recovery was not successful because while the program did find about 7,000 files they all had weird names and they seemed to be some sort of system/hidden/back-end files that users don't normally see. I wondered if it may have been due to telling the program the RAID was in NTFS format. I had to specify a file system to start the deep scan, but I didn't actually remember the RAID file system, so I chose the format used for Windows Server 2003. Now, I am rerunning a deep scan and recovery with the file system specified as FAT. The program has currently found 134,962 files and it is 26% complete. Don't know what to make of that...
Does anyone have experience with something like this? Any advice about better ways to recover? Is recovery futile?
Best Regards,
James