How To Recover an Accidentally Deleted NTFS or FAT32 Dynamic Volume (245725)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Server
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server
- Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional
This article was previously published under Q245725 SUMMARY If a Windows 2000 NTFS or FAT32 dynamic volume is
accidentally deleted by using the Disk Management snap-in, you may be able to
recover the volume and the data contained on it. You can do this only if a new
volume has not been created and formatted in its place. When Disk Management
removes a volume from a dynamic disk, it erases the volume's file-system boot
sector (sector-0 of the volume), and then removes the volume entry from the
Disk Management private region database, leaving the rest of the drive intact
(including the data). Because both NTFS and FAT32 volumes maintain backup boot
sectors, you can recover the volume by restoring the boot sector. NOTES- FAT16 volumes do not contain a backup boot sector and cannot be
recovered if they are deleted.
- In this article, the steps to recover the deleted volume do not apply to a dynamic RAID-5 volume or to a dynamic
mirrored volume.
To recover the deleted
volume, use one of the following procedures.
back to the top
To Recover a Deleted NTFS Volume- Re-create the exact same volume but choose not to format
it. This may be difficult if you do not remember the exact size you had created
originally, especially because the Disk Management snap-in tends to round
partition sizes.
- Using Dskprobe.exe, recover the backup boot sector for the
NTFS volume from the end of the volume. Because it is a dynamic volume you may
need to use Dmdiag.exe to help find the backup boot sector, or search for it by
using Dskprobe.exe (on the Tools menu, click Search Sectors).
- After rewriting the NTFS boot sector, quit
Dskprobe.
- In Disk Management, click Rescan Disks on the Action menu. This should mount the volume for immediate use.
back to the top
To Recover a Deleted FAT32 Volume- Re-create the exact same volume, but choose not to format
it. This may be difficult if you do not remember the exact size you had created
originally, especially because the Disk Management snap-in tends to round
partition sizes.
- Using Dskprobe.exe, recover the backup boot sector for the
FAT32 volume from sector-6 of the logical volume and write it to sector-0 of
the logical volume. The "Resolution" section in the following article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base describes this procedure in detail:
247575 Chkdsk Does Not Use Backup Boot Sector to Fix Corrupted FAT32 Boot Sector
- After rewriting the FAT32 boot sector, quit
Dskprobe.
- In Disk Management, click Rescan Disks on the Action menu. This should mount the volume for immediate use.
back to the top
CAUSEFor additional information,
click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge
Base: 153973 Recovering NTFS Boot Sector on NTFS Partitions
back to the top
Modification Type: | Minor | Last Reviewed: | 7/15/2004 |
---|
Keywords: | kbDynamic kbFaultTolerance kbFileSystems kbHOWTOmaster w2000dynamic w2000fs w2000ft KB245725 kbAudITPro |
---|
|