Seagate Recovery Services

UNIX and Linux Data Recovery

Fileservers, Application Servers, Mail Servers, Web Servers, NAS devices (Quantum SNAP, Dell Power Vault, etc.) and custom built Servers form the backbone of corporations' business records storage systems.

Unix and Linux servers have long been a mainstay in corporate IT. Today, along with NetWare, Apple, Solaris, HPUX, and Linux servers, form a significant portion of servers operational in businesses.

At Seagate Recovery Services, we train our technicians on platform-specific configurations, enabling us to recover data from server hardware spanning the most popular brands such as IBM, Compaq, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, Sun as well as numerous others.


CLICK HERE to Submit a Server for Data Recovery


Why servers lose data...


Naturally, the individual media in Servers suffer from the same failure points as do drives in personal computers and workstations. However, the increased complexity of many server operating systems results in additional data loss situations:

  • Server registry configuration lost
  • Intermittent drive failure resulting in configuration corruption
  • Multiple drive failure
  • Accidental replacement of media components

 

Our specially trained technicians can recover data from any operating system and hardware platform.


Operating Systems and Platforms Seagate recovers data from...

Intel-based platforms for UNIX Operating systems test including:

  • Solaris, Linux with ext2fs, xfs, reiserfs & jfs filesystems on standalone & RAID volumes
  • BSD-based systems such as FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD, BSDI
  • SCO OpenServer and Xenix
  • UnixWare from Novell and SCO
  • LynxOS
  • QNX
  • AIX


  • Non-Intel Platforms UNIX Platforms such as:

  • Solaris on Sun/SPARC equipment, with ufs and Veritas VxFS filesystems;
  • HPUX on Hewlett-Packard workstations with hfs and Veritas;
  • VxFS file systems on standalone and LVMvolumes;
  • IRIX on SGI workstations with efs and xfs filesystems;
  • VMS & OpenVMS running on Compaq & DEC equipment using ODS file systems;
  • AIX on IBM RS/6000 with jfs file systems on LVM volumes.

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