Hi,
How can I undo installation of a package on AIX 4.3 properly?
It's an install script. On linux, I usually just kill the process and delete from disk with this command "find .... exec rm -r {}\;". And it usually works. Can I do the same with AIX 4.3?
Thanks,
Itik (2 Replies)
Hi All,
I'm a newbie to system administration, I'd like to know how to check the logs (what update was installed last) , and I'd like to know how to undo the last update on the fedora 9 system ( kindof an equivalent to system restore in windows).
I have a HP 22 inch monitor, when I installed... (3 Replies)
Hi
I had extended one of the FS yesterday as rsync was failing and the temp solution was to extend it to 4GB while we worked on cron script.
spthrv01:/root# bdf /p05
Filesystem kbytes used avail %used Mounted on
/dev/vg232/lvol1 130940928 82208608 48385792 63% /p05
... (5 Replies)
I generally use 'u' to do undo in vi editor. The problem is that it only does one level of undo.
Is it possible to recursively undo all the changes in vi editor till we reach the original stage. (2 Replies)
Hi. Newbie here....so Unix for Dummies question for sure.
I was compiling a piece of software and having problems and somebody suggested:
sudo ln -s /usr/X11 /usr/X11R6
Didn't work. How do I undo this?
I am on a Mac OS X snow leopard. I figure it is something with the unlink command... (7 Replies)
I installed Solaris 11 Express on my machine and connected to it remotely using putty. I then run the svcadm disable /network/physical:nwam command to stop the NWAM service.
Now I cannot connect to the Solaris machine remotely anymore, but I have physical access to it as well.
How do I undo... (1 Reply)
I have a file with two columns (output from Tivoli Storage Manager) where each column has 13 character spaces and they are separated by 5 spaces. The columns are schedule names and node names and many of them are longer than 13 characters so they get hyphenated by TSM during the output. I... (3 Replies)
Hello!
As a totally newbie I was testing 'mount' command but it doesn't worked for me.
then finally I used this commend above 'mount /test / ' - and sever doesn't respond now :/
Is it possible to undo somehow this commanand? (5 Replies)
Hi,
Could anyone please advise if its possible in unix to undo the changes for a file that has been overwrriten.
By mistake i have overwritten a file and now i need the original file, is there a way?
Please Help!!! (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: mail.chiranjit
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
barrybackup
BARRYBACKUP(1) General Commands Manual BARRYBACKUP(1)NAME
barrybackup - Barry Project's backup program for the BlackBerry handheld
SYNOPSIS
barrybackup [-?][-d]
DESCRIPTION
barrybackup is a GUI application for backing up and restoring Blackberry handheld databases.
The application allows for filtering of databases for both backup and restore, so not all databases need to be backed up at once, nor all
restored.
Backups and configuration files are stored by default in the user's home directory, under ~/.barry/backup/PIN. This destination can be
changed in the config dialogs, per device.
The backup files are compressed tarballs containing specially named files for each record of the databases.
OPTIONS -d--debug-output Enables low level protocol debug output written to stdout/stderr.
--display=DISPLAY
Specify which X display to use.
-? --help Show summary of options.
-h, --help
Show summary of options.
TAR FORMAT
Backups are stored in tar format, compressed with gzip. Backup files are named with the following pattern:
PIN-YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS[-tag_name].tar.gz
The tag name is optional and is used to name a particular backup.
Each record is appended to the tar file using the following pattern for the filename:
DBname/RecordID RecordTypeID
That is, the database name is used as the directory name, and the filename contains the record ID and record type ID separated by a space.
Database names can contain spaces.
Record IDs are generally unique, but not all Blackberry devices mandate this, so it is possible, but rare, to have two records in the tar
file with the same filename. This is ok. The only problem you'd see is if you expanded such a tar file to a filesystem. The restore
process just reads in the filename sequentially and writes them to the device, so duplicate record IDs are not a problem.
AUTHOR
barrybackup is part of the Barry project. This manual page was written by Chris Frey.
SEE ALSO
http://www.netdirect.ca/software/packages/barry
July 28, 2009 BARRYBACKUP(1)