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Booting Windows over an hibernated Linux is not a good idea. I just lost 20 GiB of data in a shared NTFS partition…

I hibernated Ubuntu Lucid one day, and the next I fired up my computer. Some update messed up the saved option in Grub, so instead of booting Ubuntu again as it should, it started Windows 7. When I came back with my coffee, I just went on using it without recalling Ubuntu was in bear mode. I probably accessed music, Firefox profile, documents, downloads and games from the shared partition.

The next time I switched to Ubuntu, I saw thewaking up from hibernationmessage. Dang. But I expected it to fail at waking, and soft reboot instead, as happened the previous time Itried” this (in my Karmic times).  But no, it woke up alright. Cool. Or not. I quickly realized a directory in the root of the shared partition was now empty. I think the only programs accessing the shared partition on resuming were Quod Libet (music player) and Transmission (bittorrent client).

I went back to Windows, where I couldn’t even open the directory. Trying todirit in shell producedfile not found”.  Corrupted. Still, the partition’s free space had not increased, so my 20 GiB where probably still there, safe from being overwritten. Maybe.
But how to get to them?

A little research provided little help, and made my hopes even more bleak.

I ran Scandisk (“Check for Errors”) without auto repair, since I don’t wanted to risk it fixing things by further destroying my data. The result was not very informative: “Errors found. Run with auto repair.”  Unknown to me, seemingly it also marked the partition to be automatically checked on next boot. I powered off and went away, and came back with EasyRecovery later.

The computer started with me not paying attention, as usual, and when I looked, chkdsk was already spewing errors in full swing, which it did for some ten minutes. Oh well, here goes nothing.

Fortunately I did lit a candle for Santa Tecla recently, and after Windows started, my data was back, all of it as far as I can tell, though some files ended up in found.000.

So yes, this had a happy ending. You’ll forgive the dramatic suspense, but that’s to drive a point across: backup your dataAnd (in my case) keep the backup up to dateAnd of course, be extra careful with hibernation and shared partitions