Joel,

Check the data.edit_log table of your arches database. This is where arches 
keeps the load_id and edit information for resources. You can find the 
load_id in the 'note' column of this table. It's probable that even though 
your initial load did not finish the load_id of the initial load is still 
preserved in this table. The load id is the exact time the arches load 
began in YYYY-MM-DD-HH-MM-SSSSSS format (with 'LOADID:' prepended), you may 
have to do some searching to find the load_id that corresponds with the 
time of your initial load.

Hope this helps.

Ryan

On Sunday, January 3, 2016 at 8:18:58 PM UTC-8, Joel Aldor wrote:
>
> Good day,
>
> I am loading a big .arches file that contains 684 resources, but the 
> server just froze for an hour and nothing happened, so I need to restart it 
> (I only use a t2.micro instance on AWS for now)  When I checked the map it 
> was able to only load the first 409 resources, so I traced back my .arches 
> file and split the file into two, where the 2nd file contains those that 
> weren't loaded. All the resources were loaded eventually.
>
> However I wasn't able to get the reverse load command for the first 
> .arches file. I always log the load_id of all .arches files that I upload, 
> in case there we need to clean the whole database at some point. Is there a 
> way for me to extract the load_id?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Joel
>

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