Are you logged on as sysdba or oracle? I think they are the only people that have access to the audit files, however it does look like there is a problem with the inode of the file.
Can you try the following command in the directory where the file is.
It may be that you'll have to stop the database, unmount the file system and run fsck to get a better idea of what the problem is. Although there could also be a problem with the disk here as well, I'd suggest that you ensure that you have an up to date backup for this one.
Regards
Dave
Last edited by gull04; 03-17-2012 at 04:24 PM..
Reason: Couldn't spell my own name.
I have created a folder on C:\images\Raffles.jpg on my PC, and I like to copy or move to Solaris server. How can I do that?
Please advise.
Thanks in advance. (2 Replies)
Hello Gurus!
Please help!
I would like to get some help with the following:
I'm working right now on a Data Warehouse project and I need to automate a manual procedure I am using to process the data files coming into the database, any information/ideas and or which script language to go... (4 Replies)
I have a file that always generated in the system eg. /tmp/log.txt , it is generated by the application program , but this file should not be present in the system otherwise there are some program problem , I want to erase this file once the program has generate it , as I know , it can link to... (2 Replies)
Hi,
i have made this script for copy file in folder FTP in my local machine, when copy is finish i move files copied in backups_001 directory on same ftp
1°) the problem is if this script works with date if date is similar i taken, but if one day in ftp they put new file is no getting
... (0 Replies)
Hello,
I made a script to copy files from one directory to another and move file after the copy is done. When files are present in the source directory there is no problem but when no file are present I'm getting an error.
Please help !!
---------------------
#!/bin/bash
... (2 Replies)
I am trying to create files with special characters in its filenames for testing purposes. This is on a Linux RHEL4 but this should also be applicable on a Unix shell.
I am able to create files with special characters in the filenames...e.g.
cp -pv foo.gif \*special.gif
cp -pv foo.gif \... (6 Replies)
I am trying to move a file that is in the root directory. I suspect it is an old file created by someone when the system was installed. I am testing accessing the file by doing a copy but the command does not find the file.
I am operating as root. We are HP-UX B.11.23
I do long listing and... (3 Replies)
Hello experts,
I'm doing a shell script that able to copy or move files.
My situation is i have a drive ( lets say its S drive) where its receive all the files from mainframe
i need to copy all the file from S drive to T drive. but only those files that are finished copied from mainframe... (5 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a simple shell script to move .txt file(s) from a source directory one after another to the destination. The source directory is shared to windows using samba. The source files are arriving continuously and approx size is 10-15 KB. Some time the file size reached upto 100 KB and... (9 Replies)
Hi all,
I'm Using Centos 6.4
/opt/my_aplication/entry/data/0/
There are Thousands of files in this Directory, Only i need to copy or move the apache User's file from this to /tmp/backup , I have listed apache user's file using find . -user apache -type f , its gave me the only apache... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: babinlonston
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
bup-damage
bup-damage(1) General Commands Manual bup-damage(1)NAME
bup-damage - randomly destroy blocks of a file
SYNOPSIS
bup damage [-n count] [-s maxsize] [--percent pct] [-S seed] [--equal]
DESCRIPTION
Use bup damage to deliberately destroy blocks in a .pack or .idx file (from .bup/objects/pack) to test the recovery features of bup-fsck(1)
or other programs.
THIS PROGRAM IS EXTREMELY DANGEROUS AND WILL DESTROY YOUR DATA
bup damage is primarily useful for automated or manual tests of data recovery tools, to reassure yourself that the tools actually work.
OPTIONS -n, --num=numblocks
the number of separate blocks to damage in each file (default 10). Note that it's possible for more than one damaged segment to
fall in the same bup-fsck(1) recovery block, so you might not damage as many recovery blocks as you expect. If this is a problem,
use --equal.
-s, --size=maxblocksize
the maximum size, in bytes, of each damaged block (default 1 unless --percent is specified). Note that because of the way bup-
fsck(1) works, a multi-byte block could fall on the boundary between two recovery blocks, and thus damaging two separate recovery
blocks. In small files, it's also possible for a damaged block to be larger than a recovery block. If these issues might be a
problem, you should use the default damage size of one byte.
--percent=maxblockpercent
the maximum size, in percent of the original file, of each damaged block. If both --size and --percent are given, the maximum block
size is the minimum of the two restrictions. You can use this to ensure that a given block will never damage more than one or two
git-fsck(1) recovery blocks.
-S, --seed=randomseed
seed the random number generator with the given value. If you use this option, your tests will be repeatable, since the damaged
block offsets, sizes, and contents will be the same every time. By default, the random numbers are different every time (so you can
run tests in a loop and repeatedly test with different damage each time).
--equal
instead of choosing random offsets for each damaged block, space the blocks equally throughout the file, starting at offset 0. If
you also choose a correct maximum block size, this can guarantee that any given damage block never damages more than one git-fsck(1)
recovery block. (This is also guaranteed if you use -s 1.)
EXAMPLE
# make a backup in case things go horribly wrong
cp -a ~/.bup/objects/pack ~/bup-packs.bak
# generate recovery blocks for all packs
bup fsck -g
# deliberately damage the packs
bup damage -n 10 -s 1 -S 0 ~/.bup/objects/pack/*.{pack,idx}
# recover from the damage
bup fsck -r
SEE ALSO bup-fsck(1), par2(1)BUP
Part of the bup(1) suite.
AUTHORS
Avery Pennarun <apenwarr@gmail.com>.
Bup unknown-bup-damage(1)