Preparing automatic repair windows11/24/2023 ![]() However that was all Ubuntu, Windows still doesn't work. I did that and it went through and fixed a bunch of things and was able to start Ubuntu again. When I tried to start Ubuntu back up there was a filesystem error and it put me in busybox and told me to run fsck. I waited for it to stop everything properly and shut down Ubuntu normally, but it took 5ish minutes because things were still slow. After about half an hour of no progress I slowly shut it down. After a few minutes it says something about a problem and tries to proceed, still slowing Ubuntu. after doing a quick search, I have it do a deeper search on the Windows stuff and it only gets a little ways before getting stuck and slowing Ubuntu down to a crawl. Regardless, when I try booting from it (both by switching the boot order and chosing it from boot override) It shows the ASUS logo like it does when it says preparing automatic repair but does not say that this time, but it still goes to the same black screen and gets stuck.įinally, I've tried using testdisk. It's actually a Windows 10 installer but I thought it might be the right thing. The following list of software packages is required for ntfs file system support: ntfs-3g / ntfsprogs.I've tried downloading a Windows 10 recovery image, putting it on a flash drive and booting from it. The cause might be a missing software package. For "Microsoft reserved partition" it says:Ĭode: Unable to read the contents of this file system!īecause of this some operations may be unavailable. ![]() I've tried looking at the partitions in GParted and there is a red exclamation mark by two of the Windows related partitions. Please see the 'dmraid' documentationįor more details.I've tried running nftsfix which doesn't seem to do anything (and maybe isn't what I want according to other forum posts) It and mount a different device under the /dev/mapper/ directory, (e.g. Important! If the device is a SoftRAID/FakeRAID then first activate In the first case run chkdsk /f on Windows NTFS is either inconsistent, or there is a hardware fault, or it's a I've tried mounting the nfts file systems from the Ubuntu side and get this error:Įrror mounting /dev/sda4 at /media/ryan/DAE826D9E826B3A3: Command-line `mount -t "ntfs" -o "uhelper=udisks2,nodev,nosuid,uid=1000,gid=1000" "/dev/sda4" "/media/ryan/DAE826D9E826B3A3"' exited with non-zero exit status 13: ntfs_attr_pread_i: ntfs_pread failed: Input/output errorįailed to read NTFS $Bitmap: Input/output error No menu comes up, it always tries to do automatic repair then goes to a black screen forever. I've tried repeatedly hitting F8 while booting into Windows, Shift+F8, running my finger across F1-F12 and hitting shift like a mad man. It's also important to note that all I care about is retrieving certain files from the windows side, no programs or anything. Whenever I boot into Windows, it says "Preparing Automatic Repair" and then goes to a black screen. Now, I am still able to boot into Ubuntu with no problem. I left it for a while before finally hard powering it off (I knew I was going to have problems after that). The start menu, background image and file explorer all disappeared and all that was left was the task manager on a blank screen. The computer was still stuck though and the dialogue came back and this time I said Yes. I said No at first because I only had file explorer and task manager up and it seemed to be talking about the file explorer. Also, disk usage has never been a problem while running Ubuntu)Īfter that I got a dialogue box saying something like "This process is running slow, would you like to end it?" (I can't remember exactly what it said). (This seems to have been a problem with this laptop and Windows, I've had to replace an old hard drive because of it but lately it's been able to get out of this state shortly after startup. The task manager said the disk usage was at 100% even though no process was using more than 0.1 mbs. I was only able to open a file explorer and the task manager before I realized that it wasn't just because the computer had just started up. The other day I started Windows and it was running unusually slow. Although the time has always been wrong on the Windows side, as well as a disk usage issue also on the Windows side which I will get into, no other problems were present. ![]() I've been successfully running dual boot Ubuntu 16.04 LTS and Windows 10 on my ASUS Laptop ( X550DP ) and I have been able to switch between the two without trouble for a few months. I need help recovering files from the Windows side of my machine which won't boot.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |