We presume that your disk is in good physical shape. From an APFS disk (macOS): Data Recovery from an Erased APFS Disk.From an HFS disk (Mac OS X): Data Recovery from an Erased HFS Disk.From an NTFS disk (Windows): R-Studio: Data Recovery from a Re-Formatted NTFS Disk.From an exFAT/FAT disk (Windows/macOS/Linux): Data Recovery from a Re-Formatted exFAT/FAT Disk.If you need to recover data from other disks, see our other articles: This article only applies to Ext2/3/4FS formatted devices. The drive you are attempting to recover is a disk with a reformatted Ext2/3/4FS partition. Make sure to check the following before proceeding: If you are following along our procedure with your own data recovery scenario, it's important to make sure that your situation is similar enough to our test case. See R-Studio help for details: Volume Sets and RAIDs. The same technique may be used for reformatted NAS RAIDs, provided that you can assemble them in R-Studio. ![]() In this article, we'll walk you through a typical Ext4FS data recovery scenario: we'll show you how to use R-Studio to get your files back after an Ext4FS disk was reformatted. This means that if the disk is used exclusive on a Linux machine, it's very likely that the disk is ![]() Ext2/3/4FS disks cannot be recognized by Windows or macOS machines without special third-party software. For many Linux distros, this is the default file system. Ext2/Ext3/Ext4 file system (FS) is the main file system for the Linux environment, including many Linux-based network attached storage (NAS) devices.
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