[inbox] Re: [plug] undelete files in ext3 file system
Randal Adamson
ranz at himladeon.com
Tue Sep 2 13:25:02 WST 2003
There's a trash can in GNOME which I gather is part of Nautilus.
-----Original Message-----
From: Denis Brown [mailto:dsbrown at cyllene.uwa.edu.au]
Sent: Tuesday, 2 September 2003 1:09 PM
To: plug at plug.linux.org.au
Subject: [inbox] Re: [plug] undelete files in ext3 file system
On Tue, 2 Sep 2003, James Devenish wrote:
> In message <20030902042913.GA14301 at mail.guild.uwa.edu.au>
> on Tue, Sep 02, 2003 at 12:29:13PM +0800, James Devenish wrote:
> > There are some luck-related undelete tools, but you may have to
> > resort to doing a string search over the entire drive.
>
> It would be interesting to know if, by a fluke, it were possible for
> you to recover info about your file from remnants of the ext3 journal.
> Try searching Google as a first step to finding out about the world's
> experiences with file recovery.
>
Hmmm... I was wondering about the utility of journalling for that
purpose, too. I suppose that as others have mentioned, it would be a
case of first-in best-dressed. If the file system had been written to
after the "Oops", that file space may have already been overwritten.
Is there the equivalent of the "Trash" bin or "Recycle" bin (MAC / PC
respectively) concept in Linux for giving one extra level of "Oh, I
really
didn't mean that!" security. Shamefacedly I must admit to not having
looked too closely at either Gnome or KDE dsktop environments.[1]
Maybe
it's already there? Not much help in a server environment, agreed, but
would make the up-take of Linux more pleasant to the general populace.
Cheers,
Denis
[1] presently stuck in Windows-land. Makes mental note to have
VNCviewer
on a floppy in shirt pocket, in future :-)
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