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Participant
October 18, 2007
Question

InDesign - need a "Fix my Corrupted File" Upload Service

  • October 18, 2007
  • 111 replies
  • 86138 views
There are frequently posts on the forum for people who have corrupted INDD files. This means lost work and frustrated InDesign users.

The Indesign team should offer a "Fix my File" upload link to its customers.

For each corrupted file, you will help a customer, and in the process, hopefully improve the overall stability of the product (which has issues) and benefit everyone...

Adobe: If you are afraid that you will be swamped with requests to "Fix my File", then you should probably just get out of the SW business now...
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    111 replies

    Participating Frequently
    August 29, 2008
    Hi Tania:

    Im sorry to hear about your lost work.

    I suspect the network connection dropped out on you while you were editing the document. When this happens, because InDesign has lost access to the document, it will shut down in an attempt to maintain the integrity of the document. In this situation, the expectation is that a subsequent recovery will get you back to a recent version of your document. Under most circumstances, this is exactly what happens and the work is saved.

    Unfortunately, we have seen occasional instances where last data InDesign has asked the OS file system to write out to disk before the network connection is lost never actually gets written out. This can result in truncated documents that are corrupted. Id be interested in taking a look at your file to confirm that this was the case for you.

    You can send it to me directly at: tomdonov@adobe.com. Or, if it is a large file, you can upload it to our FTP server. Here are instructions for our FTP server:
    http://kb.adobe.com/selfservice/viewContent.do?externalId=kb402038

    These instructions include a step that talks about creating a folder with a case number. Instead of a case number, please give the folder a unique name and then email me to let me know the files are there.

    Thanks,
    Tommy Donovan
    Development Project Lead
    InDesign Development
    Adobe Systems, Inc.
    Participating Frequently
    June 24, 2009

    Folks:

    A quick update: We have a new FTP server at Adobe.

    As usual, if you run into corrupt files and the file is small enough (say, less than 15MB), you can send it to me directly at: tomdonov@adobe.com.

    However, if it is a large file, please upload it to our FTP server:

    • FTP: //eftp.adobe.com
    • User: cust-ul
    • Password: Upt0wn (the 0 is a zero)
    • Please create a uniquely named folder, upload your file  to it, and then email me to let me know when the file has been uploaded


    Thanks,
    Tommy Donovan
    Development Project Lead
    InDesign Development
    Adobe Systems, Inc.

    Participant
    August 21, 2009

    Hi,

    I shall be requiring your sevices.

    AnneMarie Concepcion
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    August 29, 2008
    There was an issue with saving/working with Photoshop files over a network with Leopard 10.5.3 that they fixed (I've heard) in 10.5.4. Other than that I don't know of any bugs.

    You can delete the ghosted lock file (which is probably the reason it won't open). If you can't get to it in Explorer then try a utility that will let you view invisible files. Or you might need to unlock the lock file via right-clicking and fiddling around with Properties, that might allow you to delete it.

    Re InDesign flakiness, rebuild its preferences, and go into your cache folder and delete the Recovery Data folder/files. I'm not sure where the Adobe InDesign Cache folder is in Windows ... try searching for Cache (include locked/system files).

    See if any of that will help you open the document.

    It sounds like a horrible random network problem to me, one that just caught you in its sights.

    AM
    Participant
    August 29, 2008
    Last night, at the eleventh hour of a major project, my (Windows XP, CS2) INDD catastrophically crashed. (Luckily I had an exported PDF from a few hours earlier in the day that myself and two others worked with until the wee hours in order to meet an 11:00am deadline today.) Now Im into the post mortem and trying to figure out what happened.

    I was working over a network, (as I have standardly done for 8 years now). I was in the process of placing JPGs (that I had color corrected the prior evening on my [Intel-based, Leopard] Mac [Photoshop CS3] at home), and it suddenly went down, with this error: Indesign.exe has encountered a problem and needs to close

    Auto-recovery of all types failed, no one else had been able to open it since, and there is a ghosted Lock file still with it in the folder. The .INDD file itself is just over 11mb.

    Also, subsequent restarting of InDesign resulted in random shutdowns of the whole program again or inability to open some docs, some of the time, but other times the same docs would open.

    What is Adobes response? Is there an Adobe Tech I can go over this with, to help prevent a future occurrence, etc? Please advise, thank you.
    Participant
    August 12, 2008
    PDF2ID Product did not perform as advertised. It will only convert the SIMPLEST of ID documents to something that can be used. Any transparent images, multiple images over other images, many text boxes, FORGET IT! It creates a MESS!!!

    I went back in forth with customer service via email,.. In the end only to be be told too bad, no refund.

    DONT BUY IT!!!
    Participating Frequently
    July 15, 2008
    Thomas:

    After further investigation, I can now conclude that your corruption was actually not caused by the Save As bug. Instead, it was caused outside of InDesign, probably by faulty hardware.

    Every time InDesign writes data to the hard disk, we calculate and record a checksum for that data. When InDesign later reads that same data from the disk, it verifies that the data is good by recalculating the checksum and confirming that we get the same number.

    Some of your data failed this test, which indicates that there was faulty media somewhere in your workflow. Typically, this is a bad sector on your harddisk, but it could also be a faulty thumbdrive. Occasionally, this problem can be caused by a bad file transfer or a bug in file backup software. I recommend running some disk utilities on your harddisk as a precaution.

    Although I believe you have already recovered the file, I was also able to recover it by tweaking things in my development environment and then exporting the file to INX. If you'd like a copy of the INX file, please send your email address to me at tomdonov@adobe.com, and I'll reply with the INX file as an attachment.

    Thanks again for sharing your document.

    Tommy Donovan
    InDesign Development
    Adobe Systems, Inc.
    Participating Frequently
    July 15, 2008
    Thomas:

    Thank you for providing your file. My initial investigation suggests that you hit the Save As document corruption that was fixed in 5.0.2, but the corruption is a different pattern than those I've seen before for that case. I will continue looking into it and let you know definitively as soon as I can.

    Tommy Donovan
    InDesign Development
    Adobe Systems
    thomas olbrich
    Known Participant
    July 14, 2008
    FYI: I uploaded a corrupted indesign document to the mentioned Adobe ftp server. The file name is "FaszUVerantw_Brosch_19_defekt.indd" (sorry for not zipping it).

    The file crashed after an editor has done lots of tiny text changes and save actions in this 152 pages document. No objects/content was added literally spoken but changed only. The corrupted file has 124 MB wheras 114 MB before the changes/saves, means the corrupted version appears to contain 10 MB data garbadge.

    Meanwhile the document was restored with the tools from Markzware.

    > Looking forward to the final FixIt Plugin.
    Agree.

    regards,
    thomas
    Participant
    July 10, 2008
    Hi David, just to let you know if you didn't already...!

    I'd already emailed the file to the markzware pr email address and Arnold kindly fixed my file after Adobe told me they were unable to recover it.

    Thanks again to Markzware!

    Looking forward to the final FixIt Plugin.

    Matt
    Participating Frequently
    July 9, 2008
    If all else fails, we are seeing about a 95% success rate in fixing corrupted or bad InDesign files with this general method here:

    http://docufix.wordpress.com/

    Since we are still finalizing our FixIt Plugin to make this process simpler for you, in the mean time, we will try to fix your file for free. Just email me on david AT markzware dOT nl and I will get you the FTP details on where to upload (or just email the document if it is less than 10MB).

    Friendly Regards,
    David Dilling
    Markzware
    Participant
    July 9, 2008
    Hi Tommy,
    I've just sent a file on to you. It's about a days worth of lovely typesetting work! I've no idea why the file is corrupted, Indesign just quit on me and just continues to quit whenever I try to reopen or recover the file.
    This is the second time this has happened to me in the last month, but the first time I just got on recreating it as the deadline was too close.

    If you could do anything with the file, it would save me another day of boredom

    Cheers

    Matt