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Gear / Technical Help => Post-Processing, Computer / Streaming / Internet Devices & Related Activity => Topic started by: billydee on July 26, 2020, 10:29:34 PM
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So I have this 16gb USB flash drive that I use to transfer files between locations, sometimes music, sometimes data. I plug it in recently and see this mess of crazy characters and dates, as in the attached screenshot.
There's nothing on it that can't be replaced, but I'm wondering if there's a fix to the corruption that's obviously happened. I ran RescuePro Deluxe and it recovered all the previously deleted files but none of the active ones.
Any thoughts/advice appreciated, thanks.
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So I have this 16gb USB flash drive that I use to transfer files between locations, sometimes music, sometimes data. I plug it in recently and see this mess of crazy characters and dates, as in the attached screenshot.
There's nothing on it that can't be replaced, but I'm wondering if there's a fix to the corruption that's obviously happened. I ran RescuePro Deluxe and it recovered all the previously deleted files but none of the active ones.
What format is the drive?
I found this online:
"You may be able to salvage some information about the drive from the directory entries. Try dir /x to see if the short file names are present and if they make sense. You may be able to narrow down your search that way. If the file appears valid, you can edit the long file name entry directly or just rename the file."
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So I have this 16gb USB flash drive that I use to transfer files between locations, sometimes music, sometimes data. I plug it in recently and see this mess of crazy characters and dates, as in the attached screenshot.
There's nothing on it that can't be replaced, but I'm wondering if there's a fix to the corruption that's obviously happened. I ran RescuePro Deluxe and it recovered all the previously deleted files but none of the active ones.
What format is the drive?
I found this online:
"You may be able to salvage some information about the drive from the directory entries. Try dir /x to see if the short file names are present and if they make sense. You may be able to narrow down your search that way. If the file appears valid, you can edit the long file name entry directly or just rename the file."
It's FAT, see attached.
The dir /x command is not yielding anything or I'm not doing it from the correct command prompt.
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it's showing as less than 2gb....
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it's showing as less than 2gb....
You're right, my bad. It is supposed to be a 2gb drive not a 16gb one that has the problem.
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Looks like Cthulu got to it. Yikes.
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Sounds like the problem described here: https://superuser.com/questions/456815/files-names-in-pen-drive-turned-into-gibberish-text
Have you tried CHKDSK or testdisk yet?
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Sounds like the problem described here: https://superuser.com/questions/456815/files-names-in-pen-drive-turned-into-gibberish-text (https://superuser.com/questions/456815/files-names-in-pen-drive-turned-into-gibberish-text)
Have you tried CHKDSK or testdisk yet?
Good idea.
Also, did you check it with your fave anti-virus? If you are plugging this thing into random computers, one of them could have infected it!
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Does the drive have an encryption switch?
That will cause that
What wrote the last file to the drive? (please don't say a home "scanner-fax-printer-copier-thinger.")
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As per the Morst suggestions-
I finally ran dir /x on the drive the correct way, more gibberish, see attached AND as far as virus checking it's been scanned with both ESET and Windows Defender, no issues found.
As per the if_then_else suggestion-
I ran CHKDSK and except for the screwy volume name it shows no issue that I can see. See attached.
As per the 108Ω questions-
No and no....
Thanks all.
So at this point I'm thinking I should eventually just do a quick format on it and try Rescue Pro Deluxe again and see if that yields anything new since last time.
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It's a tiny drive and you're wondering about 122 MB of data for 227 files? If it was audio that's like ten minutes.
Nuke the format and see if the drive even works anymore?
You might be able to copy the garbage-name files?
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It's a tiny drive and you're wondering about 122 MB of data for 227 files? If it was audio that's like ten minutes.
Nuke the format and see if the drive even works anymore?
You might be able to copy the garbage-name files?
Agreed that it's a tiny drive and there was nothing significant enough to worry about on it. It's the challenge of figuring out what went wrong and trying to fix it that's motivated me.
I am able to copy good files to and from the drive but can't copy any of the gibberish files or folder. So that makes me think the drive works ok.
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Incidentally, do you have a Linux/Unix system (or even Cygwin or WSL) at hand? Because a (programmer-)colleague of mine used to create similar "garbage" files and the only way to delete or rename them from the server was to use the inode information (what you get when you do a `ls -i`). Deleting and renaming by inode number always used to work.
https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/235396/mv-file-with-garbled-name-by-inode-number (https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/235396/mv-file-with-garbled-name-by-inode-number)
find . -inum 12321475 -exec mv {} new-filename \;
or
find . -inum 12321475 -print0 | xargs -0 mv -t new-filename
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if you were a Mac guy I'd say try disk drill or disk warrior
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Thanks to all for the suggestions!
Basically I gave up and just formatted the drive. No important data was lost, so the mystery shall remain. :shrug:
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Try Photorec using the deep scan. It will takes days
'inode' is Unix/Linux file systems only, and of those, just the earlier ones
Modern Linux files are more secure
P.S. - you're bringing back scary memories of corrupt graphics philes on SGI boxes....
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He doesn't need to recover the files. He had other copies.