


TestDisk software is all about data recovery. You should follow the precautions of not allowing any software to modify the SD card contents in place, and try your best to have the recovery program copy the recovered contents onto a different device, otherwise you risk making matters worse. TestDisk and PhotoRec Download: TestDisk and PhotoRec 64-bit Windows ZIP. There are Linux versions of TestDisk but I have only used the Windows version. It works with the following partitions: FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, Linux, Linux swap (version 1 and 2), NTFS (Windows NT/W2K/2003), BeFS (BeOS), UFS (BSD), JFS, XFS, and Netware. TestDisk was able to recover all the contents, even though Windows showed the device to be empty and so did other recovery programs. TestDisk 7.2 GRENIER Christophe 3,6MB Open Source Letöltés Biztonságos telepítése Leírás Paraméterek Szerkeszt TestDisk is a tool to check and undelete partitions. I had one case where, as a result of an acrimonious relationship breakup, one ex-partner had maliciously formatted (probably using a Windows “quick format”) all their ex-partner’s USB backup devices containing personal records. These are cases where other high-profile utilities that you can pay money for found nothing, no files, or found something but were unable to recover anything, even with a so-called “deep scan”. The interface is very basic, and it may take a little effort to run it properly, but I have been amazed at how good it is at recovering files from corrupted or dead USB keys and it should do the same for your SD memory card. I have only ever used it under Windows, where you have to run it as a command line utility. I think TestDisk originally designed for recovering corrupted images from camera memory cards. I have tried a number of flash memory recovery and file recovery utilities and found all of them to be unhelpful except for one with the unlikely name of TestDisk available from
