My Ubuntu 10.10 just crashed, probably due to hardware error (and in the end I was getting errors like Unknown filesystem
..... grub> ..
, and it went to the GRUB console before I could take any other action).
I reinstalled the same version from a USB stick. I had Ubuntu installed with the ext4
file system and I also have the same filesystem in the same hard disk on a different drive.
When I try to access my previous filesystem, I get errors:
Error mounting: mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/sda6,
missing codepage or helper program, or other error
In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
dmesg | tail or so
I had some important files in the previous volume ; I don't know how to retrieve them.
And what are the chances that I would get the same outcome (hardware error)? Please help me!
Try
ddrescue
to make an image of your failing drive/partition. Then useforemost
on the image you made to try and save files.As you say you're a layman, that would mean running, these commands:
Good information on how to use ddrescue on its documentation page.
After that, try foremost on the image:
If it is a hard drive failure SpinRite (www.grc.com) may be your only hope for disk recovery.