RECOVER+Recovering Damaged FilesRecovers damaged files.
VERSION
PC-DOS 2.0+
MS-DOS equivalent: RECOVER (2.0+)
TYPE
External
SYNTAX
[d:][path] RECOVER [rd:][rpath]rfilename
or
[d:][path] RECOVER rd:
OPTIONS
[d:][path] Specifies the drive letter and
directory path that contain
the RECOVER command file.
[rd:][rpath]rfilename Specifies the file to be
recovered.
RECOVER is used when you receive a "bad sector" error
message to recover a damaged file. In using this command, you
recover the data in a file with the bad sector minus the data in
the bad sector.
EXAMPLES
RECOVER B:REPORT2
recovers the file in drive B named REPORT2.
RECOVER A:
recovers all of the files on the disk in drive A.
MESSAGES
Cannot RECOVER to a network drive
You cannot use the RECOVER command on a network drive. Pause the
fileserver and then issue a RECOVER command again.
Warning - directory full
xxx file(s) recovered
There is not enough space in the directory. Copy some of its
files onto another disk and then reissue the RECOVER command.
NOTE
When you use RECOVER, it creates a new file with the same
name that contains all the data in the original file except the
data that was located in bad sectors. Also, RECOVER will not
recover files that have been erased. If you use RECOVER on a disk
that has a bad sector in its directory, each file name will have
the form FILEnnn.REC, with the number nnn indicating the order in
which the files were recovered. You will have to rename each file
on the recovered disk by determining the contents of each file
and naming it again. Wildcards may be used, but only the first
matching file name will be used. Once you have used RECOVER,
there is no way to reverse the recovery process.
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[For related topics, press R]
SEE ALSO
CHKDSK Command
COMP Command
DISKCOMP Command
DISKCOPY Command
file: /Techref/DOS/command/recover.htm, 2KB, , updated: 1999/2/20 10:24, local time: 2024/11/8 15:57,
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