[First - how it happened:]
On my Windows 10 Enterprise 20H2 x64 I have 2 archival HDDs with different letters assigned to them which I keep offline: 3.5" Western Digital Ultrastar DC HC550 18TB 7200 RPM 512 MB cache [0F38459] and its smaller counterpart DC HC550 16TB [0F38460]
I have been cleaning them thus connecting them back and forth as I never have both of them temporarily working at the same time. And then for a week I have been [most of the time when my machine was on] using freeware Disk Fresh on the 16TB one to read and re-write every bit, to avoid data fade / bit rot. I performed multiple resets of system during this process, never disconnecting 16TB and / or connecting 18TB. And after it was finished I defragmented it using UltimateDefrag
And then I disconnected it and using the same way connected the 18TB- but it assumed the letter assigned to the 16TB. I went back and forth more than once to be sure this was indeed happening, refreshing list of volumes and using not only [closed and re-opened] FreeCommander but also Windows Explorer to check this out. At some point I could no longer enter the 18TB: it showed no capacity but only its name and [the wrong] letter. So I reset the system - and during boot the chkdsk have run itself on the 18TB
[Second - the current state:]
After entering the system the letter on 18TB was still the same as for 16TB. The access to it was given back and it had now new hidden folder named found.000 holding 400+ GB of folders and files with original names preceded with e.g.
This found.000 folder I can only open when I run FreeCommander as an Administrator.
Also some folders and files from normal / old folders on 18TB are inaccessible while some old folders are empty [which were not prior to now]
[The question:]
So how do automatically move back content of that found.000 folder to its original locations?
It has almost 1000 items and [as I archive everything in folders with dates] recurring [original] names of sub-folders and files- so I have no way of knowing which had been stored within what path
On my Windows 10 Enterprise 20H2 x64 I have 2 archival HDDs with different letters assigned to them which I keep offline: 3.5" Western Digital Ultrastar DC HC550 18TB 7200 RPM 512 MB cache [0F38459] and its smaller counterpart DC HC550 16TB [0F38460]
I have been cleaning them thus connecting them back and forth as I never have both of them temporarily working at the same time. And then for a week I have been [most of the time when my machine was on] using freeware Disk Fresh on the 16TB one to read and re-write every bit, to avoid data fade / bit rot. I performed multiple resets of system during this process, never disconnecting 16TB and / or connecting 18TB. And after it was finished I defragmented it using UltimateDefrag
And then I disconnected it and using the same way connected the 18TB- but it assumed the letter assigned to the 16TB. I went back and forth more than once to be sure this was indeed happening, refreshing list of volumes and using not only [closed and re-opened] FreeCommander but also Windows Explorer to check this out. At some point I could no longer enter the 18TB: it showed no capacity but only its name and [the wrong] letter. So I reset the system - and during boot the chkdsk have run itself on the 18TB
[Second - the current state:]
After entering the system the letter on 18TB was still the same as for 16TB. The access to it was given back and it had now new hidden folder named found.000 holding 400+ GB of folders and files with original names preceded with e.g.
CA300000-
35300000-
14300000-
This found.000 folder I can only open when I run FreeCommander as an Administrator.
Also some folders and files from normal / old folders on 18TB are inaccessible while some old folders are empty [which were not prior to now]
[The question:]
So how do automatically move back content of that found.000 folder to its original locations?
It has almost 1000 items and [as I archive everything in folders with dates] recurring [original] names of sub-folders and files- so I have no way of knowing which had been stored within what path
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