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I've just installed Ubuntu 14.04 and I was also using windows 8. I was preparing an un-allocated partition of 25 GB from Windows to Ubuntu.

In the installation of Ubuntu I did not find the option of "Install Ubuntu alongside Windows 8", so I've chosen "something else" & selected sda then clicked new partition table, created a swap area around 4GB. Finally the rest partitioned as root for the system with size of 20GB.

Once the installation finished; neither can I boot into Windows nor find my NTFS partitions (C, D, E).

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2 Answers 2

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You should have zapped the GPT data before if you could not find the windows partitions. Now, of you are able to boot into Ubuntu, installed gparted and check if the windows partition has boot marked on it.

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  • Here is a screenshot of the result of the command sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda i.imgur.com/1QHvnAa.png and a screenshot for gparted i.imgur.com/6cq9qKG.png thanks
    – Hazem Taha
    May 20, 2014 at 18:09
  • Now this seems serious. Your windows partitions are being marked as unallocated.
    – Ritik
    May 20, 2014 at 18:58
  • what now ?? plz help
    – Hazem Taha
    May 20, 2014 at 19:00
  • I am really sorry to say but I think you wiped your disk now.
    – Ritik
    May 20, 2014 at 19:08
  • You can try installing test disk from Ubuntu software centre and see if it recovers your partitions
    – Ritik
    May 20, 2014 at 19:10
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We are very sorry to inform you that your Windows partition has died after a violent purge from the Ubuntu installer.

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As you can see in the output of fdisk -l /dev/sda, only two partitons are detected :

  • A Linux partition with a boot flag, probably your / filesystem.
  • An extended partition, which actually is a swap.

According to gparted, the rest is unallocated disk space, meaning it has no filesystem, no partitionning scheme, nothing. This is quite like a no man's land.

It is very likely that pieces of your (naturally) fragmented Windows data is spread all over the disk, including in the unallocated space. However, without a proper partitionning scheme and a filesystem, this data is meaning-less and inaccessible. Re-formating the space might cause another loss of data.

Sadly, the comment from Rod Smith is true : everything got messed up. You might be able to recover a few things, but that's it. If you want a piece of advice... this is a good occasion to start over in a beautiful, Linux-based, universe (I'm trying to see the positive, only the positive!)

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  • I will never use Ubuntu after all these problem it caused to me. Thanks for reply [THUMBS UP]
    – Hazem Taha
    Jul 2, 2014 at 8:25
  • I am afraid the problem never came from Ubuntu, this is nothing but a user blunder :) It did exactly what you asked, you just asked for the wrong thing. Jul 2, 2014 at 13:31

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