pcpete
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
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We had a drive from a failing mac computer come in. When we plugged the failing drive into our Mac workstation to see how it would respond, it prompted us to enter the password, but it said the password was invalid. We assumed this was because of the corruption. We then made a clone on our DDI machine, it took about a week to make an image of the drive with lots of bad sectors, over a million. When we plugged a clone of the cloned drive into our mac it let us unlock it with the password, but then it said we need to initialize the drive.
At this point I am not sure how to best handle encrypted drives like this. Our normal procedure is to run rstudio on the drive, but with the encryption I am not sure if it would work. I don't thing rstudio could do anything with this drive since i suspect it needs to access it directly. What methods do you guys recommend?
I ended up getting access to the files, which all that i have opened so far have not been corrupted. I ended up just running Disk Warrior on the clone of the clone.(after unlocking it) It repaired the drive, then it mounts normally.
On a side note, when you plug in a drive and apple prompts you to put in a password to unlock it, does the mean it is encrypted or just mean it is locked in some other way? I assumed encryption, but I am not totally sure that is correct
At this point I am not sure how to best handle encrypted drives like this. Our normal procedure is to run rstudio on the drive, but with the encryption I am not sure if it would work. I don't thing rstudio could do anything with this drive since i suspect it needs to access it directly. What methods do you guys recommend?
I ended up getting access to the files, which all that i have opened so far have not been corrupted. I ended up just running Disk Warrior on the clone of the clone.(after unlocking it) It repaired the drive, then it mounts normally.
On a side note, when you plug in a drive and apple prompts you to put in a password to unlock it, does the mean it is encrypted or just mean it is locked in some other way? I assumed encryption, but I am not totally sure that is correct