this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2023
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The quick and dirty way I've used is...
Use the nbd system (network block devices) and qemu to create a qcow2 image with your defective device as the base device. Serve this qcow2 image with qemu-nbd and attach it as a NBD device locally. Then run fsck or testdisk on the NBD device. This will let you repair the filesystem Linux sees without writing to the disk. Testdisk can scan for any filesystems left on the device if the partitions no longer match filesystems.
Also, if all else fails use photorec to slice the file types you need.
Also, ddrescue can try to read any actually failing sectors and work out what they contain, but puts a lot of stress on the device.
Beware, any method that puts more wear on the disk should not be used unless you're willing to accept the risk that the drive could get worse.
I don't know how to do any of that first part. All of the data on the drive is replaceable, it's just going to be very tedious and time consuming. I'm currently trying one other method and I think after I'm done with that, that I'm just going to skip trying to recover the data. I had some other plans for what I wanted to do with this device and I think trying to recover the data isn't worth it at this point.