Eve Atley wrote:
Thanks so much for your help, Ray.
I have tried the instructions at:
http://recover.sourceforge.net/unix/
(one of the first things I did try)
...and I got a whole lot of garbage spit back to my screen; so much so, I
had to quit.
I am attempting to do something along these lines:
On Wednesday 07 April 2004 22:42, Ray Olszewski wrote:
> As to the install itself ... either there is a problem with the RPM or it
> places recover in some truly odd location (Debian installs it in /usr/sbin,
> BTW, the usual place for this sort of app). I'm cc'ing this back to the
> list in case s
At 05:06 PM 4/7/2004 -0400, Eve Atley wrote:
Thanks so much for your help, Ray.
I have tried the instructions at:
http://recover.sourceforge.net/unix/
(one of the first things I did try)
...and I got a whole lot of garbage spit back to my screen; so much so, I
had to quit.
I am attempting to do s
Thanks so much for your help, Ray.
I have tried the instructions at:
http://recover.sourceforge.net/unix/
(one of the first things I did try)
...and I got a whole lot of garbage spit back to my screen; so much so, I
had to quit.
I am attempting to do something along these lines:
grep -a
At 04:00 PM 4/7/2004 -0400, Eve Atley wrote:
Hi Ray,
>When you "tried" to install recover (I assume from an rpm), did the install
>procedure indicate that it had succeeded or not? If not, what did it say?
Yes, from an RPM. I get no error from the RPM install install; I do get what
you indicate be
At 02:25 PM 4/7/2004 -0400, Eve Atley wrote:
This question is actually a bit dependent on what filesystem the Linux host
uses. For ext2, a couple of possibilities are (these are the Debian package
names; your distro may differ a bit) "e2undel" and "recover".
That answer is probably ext3fs
This question is actually a bit dependent on what filesystem the Linux host
uses. For ext2, a couple of possibilities are (these are the Debian package
names; your distro may differ a bit) "e2undel" and "recover".
That answer is probably ext3fs - I'm running Linux Redhat 9, latest kernel
At 12:51 PM 4/7/2004 -0400, Eve Atley wrote:
We had a user leave our company recently, and he deleted a folder on the
server that wasn't backing up. I know on Windows that, when you delete an
item, you can use often use Norton Systemworks or Utilities to retrieve that
file, as it doesn't securely