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Printpar is a program that prints the the partition tables of your disks, including the complete contents of drive tables in an extended partition. |
Imagine that your computer some day just displays an error message
"Invalid partition table. Insert boot diskette in drive A:,
press any key when ready..."
instead of booting as normal. What would you do then ?
Hopefully you will never experience this. But if you do, having a partition table printout could be the difference that saves you from loosing important data, because with it you can (either yourself or with help from a PC guru) at least repair the partition and drive tables. Without these tables correct, disk repair programs generally will not work.
But backing up your partition and drive tables may not be your only reason for using this program. It is alway interesting to learn what goes on behind the scenes, so by printing out one copy of your partition and drive tables before and one copy after using fdisk or another partition changing program like Partition Magic or FIPS, you get to learn exactly what those programs do.
For an introduction to how extended/logical partitions are constructed, refer to the file extended.txt.
Also, by knowing how things were initially you will be able to undo the changes that were made by the partition changing program if something went wrong or the result wasn't what you expected.
The print command in expert mode in Linux fdisk does a fairly good job by displaying the extended partition table entries that defines the different disk partitions, but in order to recreate a complete extended partition you need some additional information.
Note that this program only gives you the information needed to recreate the partition tables manually. To actually do so you will need a disk editor like Diskedit from Norton Utilities (refer to the section "Programs for editing the partition table" in the file recovery.txt).
(If you are running dos, windows xx or OS/2 refer to the file README.DOS for instructions on how to run printpar)
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