Re: Unrecognised file structure
From: Richard Urban (richardurbanREMOVETHIS_at_hotmail.com)
Date: 11/11/04
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Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2004 19:02:05 -0500
There is no file structure on the drive - therefore there are no files to
take ownership of!
-- Regards: Richard Urban aka Crusty (-: Old B@stard :-) "Michael Solomon (MS-MVP)" <user@#notme.com> wrote in message news:uDxXZD3xEHA.1956@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl... > Try taking ownership of the files on that drive: > Note, file ownership and permissions supersede administrator rights. How > you resolve it depends upon which version of XP you are running. > > XP-Home > > Unfortunately, XP Home using NTFS is essentially hard wired for "Simple > File Sharing" at system level. > > However, you can set XP Home permissions in Safe Mode. Reboot, and start > hitting F8, a menu should eventually appear and one of the > options is Safe Mode. Select it. Note, it will ask for the > administrator's > password. This is not your administrator account, rather it is the > machine's administrator account for which users are asked to create a > password during setup. > > If you created no such password, when requested, leave blank and press > enter. > > Open Explorer, go to Tools and Folder Options, on the view tab, scroll to > the bottom of the list, if it shows "Enable Simple File Sharing" deselect > it > and click apply and ok. If it shows nothing or won't let you make a > change, > move on to the next step. > > Navigate to the files, right click, select properties, go to the Security > tab, click advanced, go to the Owner tab and select the user that was > logged > on when you were refused permission to access the files. Click apply and > ok. Close the properties box, reopen it, click add and type in the name > of > the user you just enabled. If you wish to set ownership for everything in > the folder, at the bottom of the Owner tab is the following selection: > "Replace owner on subcontainers and objects," select it as well. > > Once complete, you should be able to do what you wish with these files > when > you log back on as that user. > > XP-Pro > > If you have XP Pro, temporarily change the limited account to > administrative. First, go to Windows Explorer, go to Tools, select Folder > Options, go to the View tab and be sure "Use Simple File Sharing" is not > selected. If it is, deselect it and click apply and ok. > > If you wish everything in a specific folder to be accessible to a user, > right click the folder, select properties, go to the Security tab, click > Advanced, go to the Owner tab, > select the user you wish to have access, at the bottom of the box, you > should see a check box for "Replace owner on subcontainers and objects," > place a check in the box and click apply and ok. > > The user should now be able to perform necessary functions on files in the > folder even as a limited account. If not, make it an admin account again, > right click the folder, select Properties, go to the Security tab and be > sure the user is listed in the user list. If not, click add and type the > user name in the appropriate box, be sure the user has all the necessary > permissions checked in the permission list below the user list, click > apply > and ok. > > That should do it and allow whatever access you desire for that folder > even > in a limited account. > > > > -- > Michael Solomon MS-MVP > Windows Shell/User > Backup is a PC User's Best Friend > DTS-L.Org: http://www.dts-l.org/ > > "Rob Sowerby" <robsowerby@PANTIESntlworld.com> wrote in message > news:mVvkd.291$yO4.87@newsfe2-gui.ntli.net... >>I have re-installed win XP pRO on my C: drive but now that it is running >> again >> my D: drive is not recognised. >> I get a message saying that it needs formatting but all my data files are >> on >> there so I don't want to do that. >> Ontrack disk recovery sees the drive (as does Windows) but cannot >> recognise >> the file structure which was NTFS. >> Is there a non destructive way that I can re-format my drive and recover >> my >> files? >> >> > >
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