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Full Discussion: Undelete, backup inodes
Operating Systems Solaris Undelete, backup inodes Post 302894554 by hicksd8 on Wednesday 26th of March 2014 06:32:18 AM
Old 03-26-2014
I'm not sure that I understand your question because, looking at your profile on this forum, you are a significant contributor. Therefore, I apologise in advance if I have completely missed the point.

There's no easy way AFAIK to 'backup' (and therefore restore) inodes. However, if it's idiots deleting files that you're concerned about, then sysadmins can manage that by creating a second 'link' to a file, in for example, another directory. If a user accidently/deliberately deletes a file then they only delete that link and the actual data isn't lost until all links are removed. Therefore, putting the link back where is should be will instantly 'restore' the file.

Does that help? Or, as I say, have I misunderstood the question?

Last edited by hicksd8; 03-26-2014 at 07:38 AM..
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DCHECK(1M)																DCHECK(1M)

NAME
dcheck - file system directory consistency check SYNOPSIS
dcheck [ -i numbers ] [ filesystem ] DESCRIPTION
Dcheck reads the directories in a file system and compares the link-count in each i-node with the number of directory entries by which it is referenced. If the file system is not specified, a set of default file systems is checked. The -i flag is followed by a list of i-numbers; when one of those i-numbers turns up in a directory, the number, the i-number of the direc- tory, and the name of the entry are reported. The program is fastest if the raw version of the special file is used, since the i-list is read in large chunks. FILES
Default file systems vary with installation. SEE ALSO
icheck(1), filsys(5), clri(1), ncheck(1) DIAGNOSTICS
When a file turns up for which the link-count and the number of directory entries disagree, the relevant facts are reported. Allocated files which have 0 link-count and no entries are also listed. The only dangerous situation occurs when there are more entries than links; if entries are removed, so the link-count drops to 0, the remaining entries point to thin air. They should be removed. When there are more links than entries, or there is an allocated file with neither links nor entries, some disk space may be lost but the situation will not degenerate. BUGS
Since dcheck is inherently two-pass in nature, extraneous diagnostics may be produced if applied to active file systems. DCHECK(1M)
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