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Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Please recommend some data recovery programs. Post 302472947 by rona on Thursday 18th of November 2010 02:14:55 PM
Old 11-18-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by Corona688
Stop any writes to the disk if you can. Any writing of new files may trash the traces of what you deleted.

We need more details. We don't even know what hardware you're operating on, let alone what version of what software.
Thanks very much for reply.

The server is Dell 1750. hard disk is SCSI 146G.

I deleted a folder witch contains about 100M website data.

I have stop the server and tack out the harddisk.

What should I do next?
 

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Padre::Autosave(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Padre::Autosave(3pm)

NAME
Padre::Autosave - auto-save and recovery mechanism for Padre SYNOPSIS
my $autosave = Padre:Autosave->new( db => 'path/to/database' ); $autosave->save_file( $path, $type, $data, $timestamp ) = @_; DESCRIPTION
The longer auto-save plan The following is just a plan that is currently shelved as some people on the Padre development list think this is not necessary and one should use a real version control for this anyway. So I leave it here for now, for future exploration. I'd like to provide auto-save with some history and recovery service. While I am writing this for Padre I'll make the code separate so others can use it. An SQLite database will be used for this but theoretically any database could be used. Event plain file system. Basically this will provide a versioned file system with metadata and automatic cleanup. Besides the content of the file we need to save some meta data: path to the file will be the unique identifier timestamp type of save (initial, auto-save, user initiated save, external) When opening a file for the first time it is saved in the database.(initial) Every N seconds files that are not currently in "saved" situation are auto-saved in the database making sure that they are only saved if they differ from the previous state. (auto-save) Evey time a file is saved it is also saved to the database. (user initiated save) Before reloading a file we auto-save it. (auto-save) Every time we notice that a file was changed on the disk if the user decides to overwrite it we also save the (external) changed file. Before auto-saving a file we make sure it has not changed since the last auto-save. In order to make sure the database does not get too big we setup a cleaning mechanism that is executed once in a while. There might be several options but for now: 1) Every entry older than N days will be deleted. Based on the database we'll be able to provide the user recovery in case of crash or accidental overwrite. When opening padre we should check if there are files in the database that the last save was not a user initiated save and offer recovery. When opening a file we should also check how is it related to the last save in the database. For buffers that were never saved and so have no file names we should have some internal identifier in Padre and use that for the auto-save till the first user initiated save. The same mechanism will be really useful when we start providing remote editing. Then a file is identified by its URI ( ftp://machine/path/to/file or scp://machine/path/to/file ) my @types = qw(initial, autosave, usersave, external); sub save_data { my ($path, $timestamp, $type, $data) = @_; } perl v5.14.2 2012-06-27 Padre::Autosave(3pm)
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