ufs
UFS Explorer Standard Access 4.2.1
With UFS Explorer Standard Access you may access files on most used file systems of different OS: UFS/UFS2 (BSD, Solaris, Unix, SnapOS), XFS/ReiserFS/Ext2/Ext3 (Linux), HFS/HFS+/HFSx (MacOS), ISO9660/UDF (CD/DVD), NWFS (Novell) FAT and NTFS. It supports any physical disks, USB mass storage devices and set of virtual disks: VMWare, MS Virtual PC,Parallels Workstation, MacOS .DMG. more>>
UFS Explorer Standard Access - With UFS Explorer Standard Access you may access and copy files from:
- most used file systems of different OS: UFS/UFS2 (BSD, Solaris, Unix, SnapOS), XFS/ReiserFS/Ext2/Ext3 (Linux), HFS/HFS+/HFSx (MacOS), ISO9660/UDF (CD/DVD), NWFS (Novell), FAT and NTFS (Windows) with system locked files access;
- almost any physical storages and virtual disks of leading virtualiztion software products.
UFS Explorer Standard Access supports physical disks, USB mass storage devices (including some Digital Camera devices, MP3 players etc.) and set of virtual disks: VMWare, MS Virtual PC, Parallels Workstation. Additionally is supports MacOS .DMG-files and image files of CD, DVD, hard disks.
It automatically recognizes most popular styles of disk partitioning and detects any of supported file systems. Full Unicode file names supports with enconding/code page setup for non-unicode file systems ensures right displaying of localized file names.
More details about software features are available in software manual.
Enhancements:
Version 4.2.1
File system access optimization; faster ReiserFS access
Version 4.2
Overall software optimization and problem fixes
Version 4.1
HFS/HFS+: fixed problem with missing files
Version 3.9.4
XFS-related problem fix
System Requirements:<<less
FFS File System Driver 0.5.1
FFS File System Driver enables you to read BSD FFS (UFS) partitions from Windows more>>
TestDisk & PhotoRec 6.8 Beta
TestDisk is a tool to check and undelete partitions more>>
TestDisk is a free and useful program which queries the BIOS ( DOS/Win9x) or the OS ( Linux, FreeBSD) in order to find the Hard Disks and their characteristics ( LBA size and CHS geometry). TestDisk does a quick check of your disks structure and compares it with your Partition Table for entry errors. If the Partition Table has entry errors, TestDisk can repair them. If you have missing partitions or a completely empty Partition Table, TestDisk can search for partitions and create a new Table or even a new MBR if necessary.
However, its up to the user to look over the list of possible partitions found by TestDisk and to select the one(s) which were being used just before the drive failed to boot or the partition(s) were lost. In some cases, especially after initiating a detailed search for lost partitions, TestDisk may show partition data which is simply from the remnants of a partition that had been deleted and overwritten long ago.
TestDisk has features for both novices and experts. For those who know little or nothing about data recovery techniques, the command line parameters /log and /debug can be used to collect detailed information about a non-booting drive which can then be sent to a tech for further analysis. Those more familiar with such procedures should find TestDisk a handy tool in performing onsite recovery.
TestDisk can find lost partitions for all of these file systems:
- BeFS ( BeOS )
- BSD disklabel ( FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD )
- CramFS, Compressed File System
- DOS/Windows FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32
- HFS and HFS+, Hierarchical File System
- JFS, IBMs Journaled File System
- Linux Ext2 and Ext3
- Linux Raid
- RAID 1: mirroring
- RAID 4: striped array with parity device
- RAID 5: striped array with distributed parity information
- RAID 6: striped array with distributed dual redundancy information
- Linux Swap (versions 1 and 2)
- LVM and LVM2, Linux Logical Volume Manager
- Mac partition map
- Novell Storage Services NSS
- NTFS ( Windows NT/2K/XP/2003 )
- ReiserFS 3.5, 3.6 and 4
- Sun Solaris i386 disklabel
- Unix File System UFS and UFS2 (Sun/BSD/...)
- XFS, SGIs Journaled File System
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