Hello, gentoo. I was wanting to do a pretty full build of my Emacs working repository. This involved first purging al *.elc files. The way to do this is
$ find . -name '*.elc' | xargs rm .. But for some reason, I typed $ find . '*.elc' | xargs rm .. I even carefully checked it before pressing RET. However, press it I did, instantly deleting all files in my working directory. OUTCH! So, I fell back on my backup from last Sunday. After about 1½ hours trial and error, I had my source files as of last Sunday back again, though git could have been more helpful than it actually is. Thankfully, I had Emacs open, with all the files modified since Sunday in buffers. So, I laboriously worked through Emacs's buffer list, saving those ones I'd since changed. I lost all my timestamps on the files, and lost all my Emacs backup files (things ending in ~ which Emacs constantly makes). But my software builds and runs. It could have been a lot worse. Boys and girls, don't use $ find .... | xargs rm unless you really know what you're doing. And even then, it's probably better not to. ;-( It occurred to me fairly quickly after that press of RET that I could have done well with a COW snapshot facility, something which has been discussed at length on another recent thread. I even have LVM on my machine for its RAID capabilities. But I've never bothered before. I mean "I'm too careful", amn't I? ;-( At least I do a weekly backup, though. So, in the end I managed to recover fairly well, thankfully. -- Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany).