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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Restoring back files from "lost+found" directory Post 28764 by dhasarath on Tuesday 24th of September 2002 07:35:09 AM
Old 09-24-2002
Lightbulb Restoring back files from "lost+found" directory

Hi Friends,

How can I Restore the Files present under "lost+found" Directory of a FileSystem (in Solaris & Tru64 OS) to their original Locations.

[I know that files that go deferenced from the Filesystem in the aspect of INODES/BLOCK/etc get updated in the lost+found Directory of that FileSystem, when booting the system or manually doing FSCK on that FileSystem]

Now-a-days I am loosing lots of files in 2 of my Machines,
One running Solaris8 and other Tru64(Digital) Unix.

Thanx in Advance.....
 

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BINHEX(1)						      General Commands Manual							 BINHEX(1)

NAME
binhex - Hexifies a series of files SYNOPSIS
binhex [ - options ] [ files ] DESCRIPTION
binhex takes the files specified in files and hexifies them in BinHex 4.0 format on standard output subject to the options specified. If files also specifies directories they are followed recursively, and all files found will be hexified. If no files parameter is specified, binhex reads a MacBinary stream from standard input and hexifies the files found; folder information is lost. OPTIONS
In the absence of any options, binhex takes the specified files and silently hexifies them to BinHex 4.0 format, writing the result to standard output. Directories named in files are followed recursively, all files found will be hexified. Files are assumed to be in MacBi- nary format. However, if the filename ends with .info the file is assumed to be the info fork of a MacIntosh file split amongst more than one file. In that case the files with .data and .rsrc extensions are also read (if present). Also, if the info fork is mentioned in the parameter list, the names of data and resource forks can also be mentioned, but those will be ignored (this is to allow wild-card expansion by the shell.) Further, if some form of AppleShare is supported by the installed program, and if the current directory, or one of the directories found during recursive processing, is a directory in the format of the supported version of AppleShare, those files will be handled according to the properties of AppleShare. -r No intelligent file-processing is performed; all files named are assumed to be plain resource files, and are hexified as if they were MacIntosh resource files with creator "RSED" and type "RSRC", unless another creator and/or type are specified. -d No intelligent file-processing is performed; all files named are assumed to be plain data files, and are hexified as if they were MacIntosh data files with creator "MACA" and type "TEXT", unless another creator and/or type are specified. -u As -d, but the codes for CR and LF are interchanged. -U Is a synonym for -u. -c creator Defines the creator name to be used if one of the previous options is specified. -t type Defines the type name to be used if one of the previous options is specified. -R Do not use run-length encoding during the conversion. This option may speed up the encoding a bit, but it is merely a historical artifact. -l List every file and directory processed. -i Do not output files, give information only (implies -l.) -q Ask the user for every file/directory whether it should be visited (implies -l.) -V Gives the patchlevel of the program, and other information. Other options are ignored and the program quits immediately. -H Give short information about the options. Other options are ignored and the program quits immediately. BUGS
As this is a beta release, there may still be some problems. SEE ALSO
macutil(1) AUTHOR
Dik T. Winter, CWI, Amsterdam, The Netherlands (dik@cwi.nl) 3rd Berkeley Distribution October 22, 1992 BINHEX(1)
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