Project Management. Resources Blog Articles. Menu Help Create Join Login. My Kali Snapshot of my current runnig linux systeam. Status: Beta. Add a Review. Get project updates , sponsored content from our select partners, and more. Full Name. Phone Number. Then I installed Kali and a few days later Windows crashed and the only solution was to re-install Windows on top of the old installation. So I'm wondering is there a way recover the Kali installation without having to repartition the drives again?
Join Date Mar Posts Yes absolutely. Download EasyBCD for free from their website. After you install it edit your current boot settings and add a Linux GRUB bootloader pointing to your Kali installation. As for your windows operating system, that is gone.
You will need to start over and first install windows in a partition; leave the rest of the drive unallocated. Boot with whatever ver of linux you want and install to the unallocated area of the drive.
You will now have a dual boot. As Seen On. Welcome to Tech Support Guy! Latest posts. Live Chat Tuesdays! Windows Chrome not synced? All Other Software. Epson printer Windows 10 1 Viewer Latest: plodr 29 minutes ago. Time sheet 2 Viewers Latest: Keebellah 33 minutes ago. Business Applications. Staff online. Gr3iz Trusted Advisor. Members online crjdriver Gr3iz. Total: members: 5, guests: Navigating in Testdisk is a little tricky, whereas dragging and dropping after the fact is a breeze.
In other words, physically detach all other storage drives. In graphically simple environments simplicity is your friend. Finally, Testdisk can also help you retrieve files that have become inaccessible for other reasons.
In fact, this is why I started using the program in the first place. I was trying to save files from a corrupted drive that could not be made to boot.
You can then mount it on another PC and copy the files where ever you want. But what if the drive is formatted to LVM? This, among other reasons, is because most Linux file managers can no longer read ext.
Nevertheless, after a few false starts, I was able to find and save the missing files. But once you do find them, the copying procedure is basically the same.
With Testdisk and a little luck, you may never lose your resume again as you can always recover deleted files in Linux. In that time, I do not claim to have made every possible mistake, only most of them.
In TestDisk, what im seeing in the List menu is exactly what I saw just before refreshing. Folders missing, but not any of the files that were displayed below.
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