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yanpgu2016-09-01 20:14:00
Windows
yanpgu, 2016-09-01 20:14:00

Is there any software that helps to recover a system (Windows 7) installed on a RAID-0 array after a failure caused by a system restore operation?

The Supermicro workstation has 4 HDDs combined in a RAID-0 array. The operating system was Windows 7 Pro. Some time ago, the main working software stopped running, no reinstallations helped, I decided to roll back the system updates, because I sinned on them. After the restore, the system simply stopped booting. The installation disk does not see any hard drives or a floppy drive during boot, you cannot reinstall the system, and you don’t want to lose some data in the array, since they were not backed up. Is there any software, like Acronis, for example, that will help somehow restore the system to working capacity, or at least save some of the files, I really don’t want to disassemble the raid array with the built-in utility.

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3 answer(s)
A
Artem @Jump, 2016-09-02
curated by the

In your case, the failure is clearly not caused by System Restore.
It's pretty obvious from the symptoms you've described that you're having problems with the drive.
The disk is trite.
In this case, you need to pull out the data, and not restore the system.
Of course, there is no such software.
Reid fell apart.
The built-in utility is also unlikely to help - it helps a lot when the disks are in order, but is useless if the array has collapsed.
And using RAID-0 on a workstation, and even with four disks, is something inexplicable, it's impossible to just imagine why this might be needed.
If the information is valuable, contact the professionals, it is possible that some files can be saved, although the probability of this after trying to restore the system is close to zero.

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Garik_Shuster, 2016-09-02
@Garik_Shuster

To save data, try RAID Reconstructor
Read here.

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Puma Thailand, 2016-09-02
@opium

you have raid 0, it’s obvious that when one disk crashes, you lose all data, you need to try to assemble raid0 with your hands, boot into Windows LiveSide and collect zero

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