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Operating Systems Linux Recover deleted files on Linux server Post 303025713 by reminisce on Saturday 10th of November 2018 08:03:13 AM
Old 11-10-2018
Thanks Neo.


I have followed the steps one by one as mentioned below:

i. Created the file in /tmp directory
ii. listed inode number of the created file : testk.txt
iii. Used the df -h <deleted dir path>


Code:
[root@ip-XX-XX-XX-XX tmp]# echo "test" > testk.txt
[root@ip-XX-XX-XX-XX tmp]# ls -li testk.txt
12876576 -rw-r--r--. 1 root root 5 Nov 10 12:47 testk.txt
[root@ip-XX-XX-XX-XX tmp]# df -h /home/user
Filesystem      Size  Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/xvda2       50G   19G   32G  37% /



Done with the steps. Please suggest the next steps to perform.




Thanks,
Reminisce
 

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LOGFETCH(1)						      General Commands Manual						       LOGFETCH(1)

NAME
logfetch - Xymon client data collector SYNOPSIS
logfetch CONFIGFILE STATUSFILE DESCRIPTION
logfetch is part of the Xymon client. It is responsible for collecting data from logfiles, and other file-related data, which is then sent to the Xymon server for analysis. logfetch uses a configuration file, which is automatically retrieved from the Xymon server. There is no configuration done locally. The configuration file is usually stored in the $BBHOME/tmp/logfetch.cfg file, but editing this file has no effect since it is re-written with data from the Xymon server each time the client runs. logfetch stores information about what parts of the monitored logfiles have been processed already in the $BBHOME/tmp/logfetch.status file. This file is an internal file used by logfetch, and should not be edited. If deleted, it will be re-created automatically. SECURITY
logfetch needs read access to the logfiles it should monitor. If you configure monitoring of files or directories through the "file:" and "dir:" entries in client-local.cfg(5) then logfetch will require at least read-acces to the directory where the file is located. If you request checksum calculation for a file, then it must be readable by the Xymon client user. Do NOT install logfetch as suid-root. There is no way that logfetch can check whether the configuration file it uses has been tampered with, so installing logfetch with suid-root privileges could allow an attacker to read any file on the system by using a hand-crafted con- figuration file. In fact, logfetch will attempt to remove its own suid-root setup if it detects that it has been installed suid-root. ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
DU Command used to collect information about the size of directories. By default, this is the command du -k. If the local du-command on the client does not recognize the "-k" option, you should set the DU environment variable in the $BBHOME/etc/hobbitclient.cfg file to a command that does report directory sizes in kilobytes. FILES
$BBHOME/tmp/logfetch.cfg $BBHOME/tmp/logfetch.status SEE ALSO
xymon(7), hobbit-clients.cfg(5) Xymon Version 4.2.3: 4 Feb 2009 LOGFETCH(1)
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