09-12-2012
Quote:
Are you sure they have been removed in the first place?
They could have been moved... or more vicious: renamed...
You should find something in the history files but that means looking at ( and have to be root...) all the users that connected since the last you knew the files present... (In older days I used to crash the system, use fsck, and reboot -n...)
Hi vbe,
Yes i am sure somebody from other team has deleted those files and folders.
I may have asked this question of the moving or renaming files but there are 4-5 main directory, lot of sub-directory and each having many files. and this happened second time in today itself. So i am sure about the files are not moved.
Yes. I don't have root access and the same others also don't have so there is very little chance that root user can delete this. That's why i checked only history for our common user.
But as per my knowledge there is high probability that they have deleted all the files from the
winscp. So that's the problem.
thanks,
pamu
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LEARN ABOUT CENTOS
dnssec-revoke
DNSSEC-REVOKE(8) BIND9 DNSSEC-REVOKE(8)
NAME
dnssec-revoke - Set the REVOKED bit on a DNSSEC key
SYNOPSIS
dnssec-revoke [-hr] [-v level] [-K directory] [-E engine] [-f] [-R] {keyfile}
DESCRIPTION
dnssec-revoke reads a DNSSEC key file, sets the REVOKED bit on the key as defined in RFC 5011, and creates a new pair of key files
containing the now-revoked key.
OPTIONS
-h
Emit usage message and exit.
-K directory
Sets the directory in which the key files are to reside.
-r
After writing the new keyset files remove the original keyset files.
-v level
Sets the debugging level.
-E engine
Use the given OpenSSL engine. When compiled with PKCS#11 support it defaults to pkcs11; the empty name resets it to no engine.
-f
Force overwrite: Causes dnssec-revoke to write the new key pair even if a file already exists matching the algorithm and key ID of the
revoked key.
-R
Print the key tag of the key with the REVOKE bit set but do not revoke the key.
SEE ALSO
dnssec-keygen(8), BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual, RFC 5011.
AUTHOR
Internet Systems Consortium
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2009, 2011 Internet Systems Consortium, Inc. ("ISC")
BIND9 June 1, 2009 DNSSEC-REVOKE(8)