krishnanh Posted March 25, 2017 Share Posted March 25, 2017 I want to store the results of the deep scan of my corrupted drive for recovery in sessions. Every time I have to scan the hard disk. How to store the results so that I can recover from the stored list of scan result. Any help ? Thanks in advance HKrishnan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Augeas Posted March 25, 2017 Moderators Share Posted March 25, 2017 It is not possible to use the stored scan results for future recovery, it can not be loaded into Recuva. Can you keep your pc and Recuva open until you have completed all your recoveries? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
krishnanh Posted March 26, 2017 Author Share Posted March 26, 2017 since the system has identified 130,000 files out of which recoverable itself is around 95000 , manually checking files to be recovered requires multiple sessions. hence if we can store the scan results we can recover up to some files, and then restart later. This is available in mini tool power recovery software Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Nergal Posted March 26, 2017 Moderators Share Posted March 26, 2017 The scan would be different if you came back. as long as the computer is running (including restart) recoverable data is being written over making the original scan to be wrong ADVICE FOR USING CCleaner'S REGISTRY INTEGRITY SECTION DON'T JUST CLEAN EVERYTHING THAT'S CHECKED OFF. Do your Registry Cleaning in small bits (at the very least Check-mark by Check-mark) ALWAYS BACKUP THE ENTRY, YOU NEVER KNOW WHAT YOU'LL BREAK IF YOU DON'T. Support at https://support.ccleaner.com/s/?language=en_US Pro users file a PRIORITY SUPPORT via email support@ccleaner.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Moderators Augeas Posted March 26, 2017 Moderators Share Posted March 26, 2017 There's nothing to stop you sorting on state, if that's what you want to recover, and then highlighting/checking a few thousand files, recovering them, going for a coffee, checking the next few thousand, etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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