Google explains how Drive users may restore lost files

Martin Brinkmann
Dec 7, 2023
Updated • Dec 7, 2023
Google
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Some Google Drive users reported online that they were missing months worth of files. Most stated that they lost months worth of files from one day to the next. It took Google a few days to confirm that "a small subset" of Google Drive users was affected by the issue.

Google has now identified the underlying issue that caused the loss of files for users. The culprit, according to Google, is Drive for Desktop. Google Drive for desktop version 84.0.0.0 to 84.0.4.0 may cause the issue for devices running Microsoft Windows or macOS.

Google posted instructions to restore lost files that affected Drive users may follow. A new support page lists three options that users have at their disposal to deal with the issue and recover their files.

  • Recover files from backup from the Drive for desktop app
  • Advanced: Recover files from backup using the command line interface
  • Additional troubleshooting options for data recovery

Recover files from backup from the Drive for desktop app

This is probably the easiest option for most users. Here are the required steps:

  1. Download and install the latest version of Drive for desktop for Windows or macOS.
  2. Run Drive for the desktop.
  3. Open the Drive interface with a click on the icon.
  4. Hold down the Shift-key and left-click on the Settings icon in the Drive interface.
  5. Select "Recover from backups". One of two things happens next:
    1. Recovery has started. This starts the restoration process of the files, which is good. There may still be issues related to disk space, but if you have enough free storage, the files should be restored.
    2. No backups found. The files can't be restored using this way.

The other options

Instead of trying to restore Google Drive files using the method described above, you may also try to restore backups from the command line.

Google suggests to run the following command on Windows after making sure that the Drive for desktop software is not running anymore: "C:\Program Files\Google\Drive File Stream\launch.bat"--recover_from_account_backups

Users on macOS need to run the following command in Terminal instead after closing Google Drive: "/Applications/Google Drive.app/Contents/MacOS/Google Drive"
--recover_from_account_backups

If this method fails as well, you may still be able to restore data from an operating system backup.

Here is how that is done on Windows:

  1. Open the following directory in Explorer: %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Google
  2. Right click on DriveFS -> Properties -> Previous Versions tab.
  3. If a previous version is available, select the latest version before the Drive for desktop account was disconnected. Then click the dropdown next to the [Restore] button and select [Restore to ...]
  4. Select a destination folder and save the DriveFS directory there.
  5. The restored DriveFS folder can now be used to recover Drive files using the command line interface.

And this is the macOS step-by-step guide:

  1. Open a new Finder window.
  2. In the menu bar at the top of the screen open the “Go” menu and click “Go to Folder”.
  3. Copy and paste the following into the box ~/Library/Application Support/Google/DriveFS
  4. Follow the steps at Restore items backed up with Time Machine on Mac - Apple Support to restore any folders with 21-digit names that have been deleted.
  5. Proceed with the steps to use the Drive recovery tool to recover your files.

Closing Words

Affected Google Drive users may be able to restore their files from a backup. Users who tried to fix the issue by disconnecting their accounts or deleting caches may not be able to restore their files.

Now You: were you affected by the Drive issue? Did one of the methods restore your files? (via Deskmodder)

Summary
Article Name
Google explains how Drive users may restore lost files
Description
Google has published instructions for Google Drive users affected by a data loss issue that may restore lost files.
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Ghacks Technology News
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Comments

  1. archie bald said on December 7, 2023 at 3:25 pm
    Reply

    Tech majors work very hard to limit, event impede files management by data owners: basically inexistent software on mobile platform, free or paid for; anemic programs on mac, chrome and windows. Any file manager software worth its salt on proprietary OS’s must be purchased separately -for a pretty penny- and can even not be relied upon, unless heavily maintained. That’s until the programmer sells out and the software either vanishes or becomes riddled with backdoors and newfound limitations.

    That users could be convinced to install the desktop version of a cloud service confounds me.

    Time to wake up and reclaim your property, acknowledge that tech giants are not benevolent entities. They do not work for you: you work for them instead, knowingly or not.

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