@Obsolesce said in UREs Strike InnoDB on MySQL:
@scottalanmiller said in UREs Strike InnoDB on MySQL:
@Pete-S said in UREs Strike InnoDB on MySQL:
Step one is to remove the drives and clone them with dd or recovery tool to a new drive.
You could probably recover 99.9% of the data - if you want.As you can guess from all of their previous issues, they don't want to pay for any recovery, they just want it magically fixed for free. They don't own any storage onto which to clone it, either.
Then what is the point of any of it? It appears to have zero value to the business.
I said that to them.