RECOVER(1) General Commands Manual RECOVER(1)NAME
recover - recover a deleted file
SYNOPSIS
recover [device] [options]
OPTIONS -h, --help prints help
-a, --all no filtering; dump all deleted inodes
DESCRIPTION
recover recovers a file which matches some ext2 - info about the deleted inode by getting all the deleted inodes and filtering them. It's
based upon the Ext2Undeletion-howto by Aaron Crane. Using this utility, your chances to recover a lost file should increase a lot.
QUESTIONS ABOUT THE DELETED FILE
o Hard disk device name
o Year of deletion
o Month of deletion
o Weekday of deletion
o First/Last possible day of month
o Min/Max possible file size
o Min/Max possible deletion hour
o Min/Max possible deletion minute
o User ID of the deleted file
o A text string the file included (can be ignored)
BUGS
Please note that recover does not work with ext3 filesystems, it is strictly ext2-only. For further information on this, please read
/usr/share/doc/recover/README.ext2only
WARRANTY
There is no warranty.
SEE ALSO
debugfs (8)
AUTHOR
Tom Pycke (Tom.Pycke@advalvas.be)
WEBSITE
http://users.linuxbox.com/~recover
November 4 1999 RECOVER(1)
Check Out this Related Man Page
ARBTT-RECOVER(1) Program references ARBTT-RECOVER(1)NAME
arbtt-recover - tries to recover a broken arbtt data log
SYNOPSIS
arbtt-recover [OPTION...]
DESCRIPTION
arbtt-recover tries to readsthe data samples recorded by arbtt-capture(1), skipping over possible broken entries. A fixed log file is
written to <file>~/.arbtt/capture.log.recovered</file>. If the recovery was successful, you should stop arbtt-capture and move the file to
<file>~/.arbtt/capture.log</file>.
As a sid effect, arbtt-recover applies the log compression method implemented in version 0.4.5 to the samples created by an earlier
version. If you have a large logfile written by older versions, running arbtt-recover is recommended.
OPTIONS -h, -?, --help
shows a short summary of the available options, and exists.
-V, --version
shows the version number, and exists.
-i, --infile
logfile to use instead of ~/.arbtt/capture.log
-o, --outfile
where to save the recovered file, instead of ~/.arbtt/capture.log
FILES
~/.arbtt/capture.log
binary file, storing the arbtt data samples
~/.arbtt/capture.log.recovered
binary file, storing the fixed arbtt data samples
SEE ALSO
See the arbtt manual for more information and the arbtt hackage page[1] for newer versions of arbtt.
AUTHORS
Joachim Breitner <mail@joachim-breitner.de>
Main author of arbtt
Sergey Astanin <s.astanin@gmail.com>
Contributor
Martin Kiefel <mk@nopw.de>
Contributor
Muharem Hrnjadovic <muharem@linux.com>
Contributor
NOTES
1. arbtt hackage page
http://www.hackage.org/package/arbtt
arbtt manual 04/07/2012 ARBTT-RECOVER(1)
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