recoverdm(1) recover files on disks with damaged sectors

SYNOPSIS

recoverdm -t <type> -i <file/device-in> -o <output_file> [-l <sectors_file>] [-n retries]
[-s rotation_speed] [-r retries] [-b start_offset] [-p skip_blocks_count]

DESCRIPTION

recoverdm recover disks with bad sectors. You can recover files as well complete devices. In case it finds sectors which simply cannot be recovered, it writes an empty sector to the output file and continues.

When recovering a CD or a DVD and the program cannot read the sector in "normal mode", then the program will try to read the sector in "RAW mode" (without error checking etc.). This toolkit also has a utility called mergebad which merges multiple images into one.

OPTIONS

-t <type>
See the above table to choose a value for <type>.
-i <file/device-in>
Device or file to recover.
-o <output_file>
File where to write to. This file should not already exist.
-l <sectors_file>
Generates a mapfile containing checksums and a list of bad sectors. This mapfile can then be used with mergebad to create one correct image from several damaged images.
-n retries
Number of retries before going on with next sector. Default is 6. For CDROMs it is advised to use 1.
-s rotation_speed
Rotation speed of CDROM/DVD. Default is 1.
-r retries
Number of retries while reading in RAW mode before going on with next sector. Default is 6. It is advised to use at least 3.
-b start_offset
Point to start.
-p skip_blocks_count
How many sectors are skipped after non-read one. Use more to speed-up the recover process. Default is 1.

TYPE OF DEVICES

These are the values can be used with -t option:

    FILE            1
    FLOPPY          10
    FLOPPY_IDE      11
    FLOPPY_SCSI     12
    CDROM_IDE       20
    CDROM_SCSI      21
    DVD_IDE         30
    DVD_SCSI        31
    DISK_IDE        40
    DISK_SCSI       41

AUTHOR

The recoverdm was written by Folkert van Heusden <[email protected]>.

This manual page was written by Joao Eriberto Mota Filho <[email protected]> for the Debian project (but may be used by others).