Alsoft DiskWarrior - 3.0 Quick Start Guide

Running DiskWarrior
Rebuilding Your HFS and HFS Plus Disks
You will find DiskWarrior extremely easy to use. You will start by selecting a disk, clicking Rebuild, and then waiting a moment for the DiskWarrior Report. Then you will view the Report, making note of the problems that were found and repaired and anything that DiskWarrior recommends to you. At this point, you should preview the rebuilt disk by checking if any files or folders you may have lost have been recovered, opening documents, and running applications. Once you are satisfied that the Preview disk is satisfactory, you will click Replace to replace the directory on the original disk with the new, optimized replacement directory that you just previewed.
Alsoft recommends, however, that you thoroughly read the remainder of this document so that you understand how DiskWarrior works, and what you should look for in each step. Follow these steps to rebuild your disks with DiskWarrior:
Note: Alsoft recommends that you regularly make a complete backup of your disks. This will allow you to restore your data regardless of any problem that might arise, including those that DiskWarrior cannot repair such as damaged partition maps, corrupted disk drivers, or mechanical disk malfunctions.
1) Make sure the DiskWarrior CD is in your internal CD drive.
The DiskWarrior CD is bootable.
2) Select Restart from the Special menu to restart your Mac OS computer.
On most Mac OS computers, you need to hold down the “C” key to start from a CD. Consult the documentation that came with your computer to determine what you need to do to start from the DiskWarrior CD.
3) When the computer has completed starting up from the DiskWarrior CD, the DiskWarrior application will open automatically.
You will then be presented with the DiskWarrior main window from which you can rebuild disk directories.
4) Select the disk to be rebuilt from the disks pop-up menu.
5) The lower portion of the main window will indicate whether the directory is ready to be rebuilt.
If for some reason DiskWarrior cannot rebuild the diskʼs directory, it will indicate the reasons the directory cannot be rebuilt.
6) Click the Rebuild button.
DiskWarrior will begin building the replacement directory on the disk to be rebuilt. It will first analyze the disk. This analysis can take anywhere from several seconds to several minutes or longer, depending on the number of files on the disk. When DiskWarrior is finished, it will display a dialog informing you of the results of the rebuild. For further information on what DiskWarrior reports, refer to “What to Look for in the DiskWarrior Report” later in this document.
7) Test the replacement directory.
At this point, the original directory information on your disk has not been replaced, and it will not be until you click “Replace”. The DiskWarrior Report gives you an option to preview how your disk will appear after the original directory is replaced. For further information, refer to “What to Look for During Preview” later in this document.
8) Make sure that you quit any applications you have tested in the previous step before proceeding.
You do not need to stop the Preview before proceeding, but you may if you wish. DiskWarrior cannot replace the directory if applications and documents are left open.
Note: If the disk you have selected is locked, you will be able to preview the replacement directory but you will not be able to write the new directory to the disk
9) Click “Replace” to use the replacement directory, or “Cancel” to leave the directory untouched.
If you click “Replace,” DiskWarrior will install the replacement directory on your disk. This will result in your disk being “replaced” by the Preview disk described in step 7 above. If you click “Cancel,” your disk will be untouched and you will be returned to step 4 above. The Replace button is disabled when the disk is locked, there is a malfunction, or the disk is too severely damaged to be repaired.
Note: In the event that critical items that you wish to recover remain missing during the preview, it is recommended that you do not proceed with the rebuild (refer to “What to Look for During Preview” later in this document).
10) DiskWarrior will install the rebuilt directory and keep you updated with its progress.
DiskWarrior uses a fail-safe method of replacing the directory whenever possible, which will be most cases. To use the fail-safe method, there merely needs to be enough free space on the disk to write the new directory. There is redundancy designed into the fail-safe method, assuring there is never any risk of ending up with an unusable disk if the process is interrupted. You can go back to step 4 for any disk for which the process was interrupted.
11) Quit DiskWarrior by selecting "Quit DiskWarrior" from the DiskWarrior menu. Your computer will now restart.
What to Look for During Preview
When DiskWarrior presents the “preview disk,” you have the opportunity to check and test the disk as it will appear after it is rebuilt. You can run applications, open documents, and see if files and folders that you lost have been recovered.
If the original disk was visible on the desktop before you ran DiskWarrior, DiskWarrior will display both the original disk and the preview disk in the DiskWarrior Preview Window. Both of these disks will be locked during the preview, so you will not be able to make any changes to either of them. Both the original disk and the preview disk will appear within the panes of the DiskWarrior Preview Window.
DiskWarrior may create special folders at the root level of the disk. You should pay particular attention to the files and folders that DiskWarrior places in these folders. The folder called “Rescued Items” contains files and folders whose enclosing folder could not be found. If any of these files or folders are part of a software package, you may need to create enclosing folders with the correct names and locations after you have rebuilt your disk so that the software that uses these files works correctly, or you may need to reinstall the software package.
If DiskWarrior creates a folder titled “Damaged Items,” then this folder contains files that were recovered but may have problems. For instance, these files may have been truncated because blocks were missing from the file, or the existing directory information may have indicated that two files occupied the same block. The DiskWarrior Report created after the rebuild is completed will tell you if two files own the same block (refer to “What to Look for in the DiskWarrior Report” later in this document). If this is the case, then DiskWarrior will separate the two files for you after the directory is replaced. Once the rebuild is complete, you will need to determine which of these files can be salvaged and which has damaged data.
At this point in the process, if you discover that there are items missing from the preview disk, use the Find feature of the Preview Window to search for invisible items. Make sure the preview disk is the disk selected in the left pane.
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