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Full Discussion: UNIX Recovery
Top Forums UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users UNIX Recovery Post 5807 by dmwaff on Thursday 23rd of August 2001 06:13:38 PM
Old 08-23-2001

It is after the fact, but in the future you can attempt a recover by forcing the editor to preserve your buffer. You will find this useful if you have made edits, then discover that you can't save your edits. You can then use the vi -r <file> to recover the buffer after you close.

If the file system is full you can also delete something with :! rm <junkfile> the !(bang) allows you to issue unix commands within the editor, like : !df to see the space.

Best case, write the file to a directory in another filesystem that has space available with :w /usr/local/../.../file

Daivd
 

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VIRECOVER(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					      VIRECOVER(8)

NAME
virecover -- report recovered vi edit sessions SYNOPSIS
/usr/libexec/virecover DESCRIPTION
The virecover utility sends emails to users who have vi(1) recovery files. This email gives the name of the file that was saved for recovery and instructions for recovering most, if not all, of the changes to the file. This is done by using the -r option with vi(1). See the -r option in vi(1) for details. If the backup files have the execute bit set or are zero length, then they have not been modified, so virecover deletes them to clean up. virecover also removes recovery files that are corrupted, zero length, or do not have a corresponding backup file. virecover is normally run automatically at boot time using /etc/rc.d/virecover. FILES
/var/tmp/vi.recover/recover.* vi(1) recovery files /var/tmp/vi.recover/vi.* vi(1) editor backup files SEE ALSO
vi(1), rc.conf(5) HISTORY
This script, previously known as recover.script, is from nvi and was added to NetBSD in 1996. It was renamed in 2001. AUTHORS
This man page was written by Jeremy C. Reed <reed@reedmedia.net>. BSD
October 9, 2006 BSD
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