On Fri, 3 Apr 2009, snott wrote:

Update: I figured out how to get scan_ffs to read a file by looking at the
program source (if it starts with / then it considers it a regular file to
read instead of a device) and got the following results which matches well
with the TestDisk output.

$ scan_ffs -s /recovery/disk0.img
ufs1 at 1087 size 2621440 mount / time Wed Dec 31 16:00:00 1969
ufs1 at 10486847 size 5242880 mount /var time Wed Dec 31 16:00:00 1969
ufs1 at 31458367 size 5242880 mount /usr/home time Wed Dec 31 16:00:00 1969
ufs1 at 54525634 size 46680873 mount /mnt time Wed Dec 31 16:00:00 1969

Looks about right compared to the df output I had from that host:

Filesystem      Size   Used  Avail Capacity  Mounted on
/dev/twed0s1a   4.9G   2.8G   1.7G    62%    /
/dev/twed0s1e   9.8G   5.0G   4.0G    56%    /var
/dev/twed0s1f   9.8G   952M   8.1G    10%    /usr/home
/dev/twed0s2e    88G    15G    65G    19%    /mnt

So, what can I do with those numbers?  It doesn't look like there's any
valid MBR or disklabel on this disk image.  Can I extract these filesystems
one at a time from the image and mount them somehow?

Looks like scan_ffs is reporting block size. I'd take a spare computer with a blank disk and do a minimal FreeBSD install on it, setting the units to blocks in the partition screen and duplicating the values given by scan_ffs. Then connect your read-only image media and dd to each partition, using dd's skip option to skip over previous partition data.

Daring users (i.e., those who are sure they won't confuse source with target) might install a blank drive in a live machine and use fdisk, bsdlabel, and dd from there.

-Warren Block * Rapid City, South Dakota USA
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