On Fri, Mar 15, 2002 at 11:54:38PM -0600, Brian wrote: > rm -rf is a great utility. Unless, of course, you're in the wrong > directory. And so I ask, how can I go about recovering a directory that > became victim to the almighty rm -rf? B*A*C*K*U*P Sorry to editorialize, especially in a moment like this but this is why I was preaching: - separate your $HOME stuff in $REALLY_HOME and $MP[3G]S_AND_OTHER_CRAP, where $REALLY_HOME is less than 640 Megs (guess why) - backup each accordingly, like $REALLY_HOME once every other day (use one good quality CD-R once a day and crap from 100/spindle the rest of the week... if it fails - you can live with it) and $OTHER_STUFF when you add something new And if you tell me that you have had 6 gigs of $REALLY_HOME critical stuff that you haven't backed up, please allow me to not believe it. > Some of the files have probably been overwritten, but I'm talking about 6 > GB+ of files that were deleted. Since it's on the /home partition, I can > only assume that < 1 MB of data has been written to the partition. In > theory, the deleted inodes should still be out there. Are there any > methods/utilities that can help me? In theory data is there, but metadata is gone. Dump that partition into a file in a spare partition/hdd and analyze it later. But if it's binary data... slim chance. florin -- "If it's not broken, let's fix it till it is." 41A9 2BDE 8E11 F1C5 87A6 03EE 34B3 E075 3B90 DFE4 -------------- next part -------------- A non-text attachment was scrubbed... Name: not available Type: application/pgp-signature Size: 232 bytes Desc: not available Url : http://shadowknight.real-time.com/pipermail/tclug-list/attachments/20020316/acf50b31/attachment.pgp