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Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users recovering a deleted directory Post 302478800 by Corona688 on Thursday 9th of December 2010 02:04:41 AM
Old 12-09-2010
Quote:
Originally Posted by COKEDUDE
I accidentally deleted a very important directory today with this rm -r. What would be the recommended way to recover my directory?
First off, stop writing to your home folder, at all. Unmount it if you can. Every write could be overwriting files you want back.

What is your filesystem, anyway?
Quote:
After a lot of googleing I have seen these choices. Could I get some recommendations please?
Testdisk
Photorec- Doesn't recover file name like I would like.
Is files with no names better than no files at all? I don't know a tool that can put back "rm -rf" like it never was, you deleted them so take what you can get. Depending on file type, there may be metadata in the files that'd help name them anyway.
Quote:
I have encrypted home directory.
You'll need to decrypt it into a format that looks like a normal volume for nearly any tool to touch it.
Quote:
Magic Rescue
Much the same idea as photorec, but more powerful, capable of extracting more kinds of files. Also sloooooooooooooooow.

Last edited by Corona688; 12-09-2010 at 03:15 AM..
 

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LESSECHO(1)						      General Commands Manual						       LESSECHO(1)

NAME
lessecho - expand metacharacters SYNOPSIS
lessecho [-ox] [-cx] [-pn] [-dn] [-mx] [-nn] [-ex] [-a] file ... DESCRIPTION
lessecho is a program that simply echos its arguments on standard output. But any metacharacter in the output is preceded by an "escape" character, which by default is a backslash. OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below. -ex Specifies "x", rather than backslash, to be the escape char for metachars. If x is "-", no escape char is used and arguments con- taining metachars are surrounded by quotes instead. -ox Specifies "x", rather than double-quote, to be the open quote character, which is used if the -e- option is specified. -cx Specifies "x" to be the close quote character. -pn Specifies "n" to be the open quote character, as an integer. -dn Specifies "n" to be the close quote character, as an integer. -mx Specifies "x" to be a metachar. By default, no characters are considered metachars. -nn Specifies "n" to be a metachar, as an integer. -fn Specifies "n" to be the escape char for metachars, as an integer. -a Specifies that all arguments are to be quoted. The default is that only arguments containing metacharacters are quoted SEE ALSO
less(1) AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Thomas Schoepf <schoepf@debian.org>, for the Debian GNU/Linux system (but may be used by others). Send bug reports or comments to bug-less@gnu.org. Version 487: 25 Oct 2016 LESSECHO(1)
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