10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Solaris
I have a Sun sparc classic that I am trying to recover data off. The main CPU part just clicks or beeps when powered up, but does not come on (nothing on screen, and LED in front not lighting up).
There is also an external SCSI drive, and I have verified there is a drive inside the CPU.
... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: mackconsult
8 Replies
2. Linux
Hi all. Not sure where to post this, so figured I'd start here. I have a LVM2 partition that has become unreadable. I've scoured dozens of threads about the topic and have hit a wall, so any advice is appreciated. Below is what I think shows what my major problem is:
First, a simple mount... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: dargason
3 Replies
3. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users
I accidentally deleted a very important directory today with this rm -r. What would be the recommended way to recover my directory? After a lot of googleing I have seen these choices. Could I get some recommendations please?
Testdisk
Photorec- Doesn't recover file name like I would like. ... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: cokedude
10 Replies
4. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
I have a flash drive which contained very important docs. But somebidy accidently dleted those files. I want to recover these files anyhow.
I have listened the Linux have best possible chances of recovering it.
Can anybody tell me how to recover that? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: nixhead
1 Replies
5. High Performance Computing
Hi all,
I'm writing an MPI application, in which I handle failures and recover them. In order to do that, in case of one node failure, I would like to remove that node from the MPI_COMM_WORLD group and continue with the remaining nodes.
Does anybody know how I can do that?
I'm using... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: SaTYR
5 Replies
6. SCO
I've been working with SCO Unix for several years now but have never had to restore a system from a bare drive.
I have a bootable CD that contains what appears to be the correct files necessary to recover the boot and root filesystems.
I've got the BIOS setup such that the CD is the first... (12 Replies)
Discussion started by: teamhog
12 Replies
7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
By accident I erased a file at work and I need to restore it from a backup tape. My manager says I will have to use the mt command with the fsf option to look through the tape but I am confuzed. I did a restore -t to get a listing of the tape. This is taking a long time.
If I sound... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: mojoman
1 Replies
8. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
Is there a way to recover data from a SCO UNIXWARE 7.4 operating system without using a tape backup device?
We believe there is some data in some directories that was there once; but not anymore, we don't have a backup on tape.
So, is there any other solution to recover?
Hope... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Yorgy
0 Replies
9. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers
Hello,
I was reading the manual on rm and it states that when you use 'rm' the files are usual recoverable, how is this done?
Does it assume that a backup system is in place?
Cheers
Jack (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: jack1981
4 Replies
10. SCO
I am helping a company recover a system that is SCO OS 5.0.5 - they have their backup media, cd copies of SCO, but they do not have their license keys to install and SCO is being difficult in validating their license.
Does anyone have an install license key for 5.0.5 that they would be willing... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: ggraham
1 Replies
CVTBATCH(8) InterNetNews Documentation CVTBATCH(8)
NAME
cvtbatch - Convert Usenet batch files to INN format
SYNOPSIS
cvtbatch [-w items]
DESCRIPTION
cvtbatch reads standard input as a sequence of lines, converts each line, and writes it to standard output. It is used to convert simple
batch files that contain just the storage API token of an article to INN batch files that contain additional information about each
article.
Each line is taken as a storage API token indicating a Usenet article. Only the first word of each line is parsed; anything following
whitespace is ignored. Lines not starting with a valid token are also silently ignored.
If the input file consists of a series of message-IDs, then use grephistory with the -s flag piped into cvtbatch.
OPTIONS
-w items
The -w flag specifies how each output line should be written. The items for this flag should be chosen from the "W" flag items as
specified in newsfeeds(5). They may be chosen from the following set:
b Size of the article in bytes.
f Storage API token of the article (same as "n").
m Article message-ID.
n Storage API token of the article.
t Arrival time of the article as seconds since epoch.
The default is "nm", that is to say the storage API token followed by the message-ID of the article.
HISTORY
Written by Rich $alz <rsalz@uunet.uu.net> for InterNetNews. Converted to POD by Julien Elie.
$Id: cvtbatch.pod 8776 2009-11-15 09:24:06Z iulius $
SEE ALSO
grephistory(1), newsfeeds(5).
INN 2.5.2 2009-11-15 CVTBATCH(8)