> On Sun, 27 Oct 2002 11:17:12 -0800, jdow wrote:
>
> [recover]
>
>> Well, give 'em a try. Ext2 is Ext3 plus a journal. Or do they simply
>> refuse to run if the journal is present?
>
> Last time I tried "recover" on an ext3 partition (long ago -- I
> think with Seawolf or Enigma), I got a segme
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On Sun, 27 Oct 2002 11:17:12 -0800, jdow wrote:
[recover]
> Well, give 'em a try. Ext2 is Ext3 plus a journal. Or do they simply
> refuse to run if the journal is present?
Last time I tried "recover" on an ext3 partition (long ago -- I
think with Se
Well, give 'em a try. Ext2 is Ext3 plus a journal. Or do they simply
refuse to run if the journal is present?
(If you've written much of anything to the disk since you deleted the
files recovery COULD be iffy. Try anything you can as soon as you can
while preventing writes to the disk with the del
Hi Aaron,
Thanks for your response.
RH8.0 has both mc and debugfs installed but unfortunately they work for
ext2 only.
I am not aware of 'recover'. It can't be found in RH8.0
google search found that the kind of file system used is eg.ext2,
reiserFS, vfat not ext3. Its version is "v1.3c"
An
On Sun, Oct 27, 2002 at 06:42:19PM +0800, Stephen Liu wrote:
> Hi All,
>
> On KDE Konqueror if I accidental delete a file or directory how can I
> recover it (undelete)
>
> Thanks
>
> Stephen Liu
With ext2 systems there were three ways. A program called recover (must
be installed) , mc and debug
From: "Stephen Liu" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> On KDE Konqueror if I accidental delete a file or directory how can I
> recover it (undelete)
Stephen, for some one at your level of expertise the answer is basically,
"There is no way." With any OS of the level of complexity of Windows NT,
Linux, BSD, or