Compadre voy a ver si consigo el software por otro lado porque no se si
sabes que google cada vez nos bloquea más, a lo mejor después hay hasta un
Plan Google para una Cuba Libre.
Google Code está bloqueado para Cuba hace rato, igual que Google Tools y
otras más que se suman.

Por alguna casualidad usted lo tiene por ahí y me lo puede enviar al
privado??


On Tue, May 20, 2008 at 8:49 AM, Carlos Javier Borroto <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 7:10 PM, BCS Yarieldis Claro
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Alguien conoce una herramienta para recuperar archivos borrados en ext3?
> >
> Lo mejor, o incluso lo único que he encontrado hasta el momento es
> ext3grep[1], pero del tuto[2] que seguí para recuperar unos datos
> perdidos y que tuve un 60% exito, te dejo este texto:
>
> "The most frequently quoted passage comes from the ext3 FAQ itself:
>
> Q: How can I recover (undelete) deleted files from my ext3 partition?
>
> Actually, you can't! This is what one of the developers, Andreas
> Dilger, said about it:
>
> In order to ensure that ext3 can safely resume an unlink after a
> crash, it actually zeros out the block pointers in the inode, whereas
> ext2 just marks these blocks as unused in the block bitmaps and marks
> the inode as "deleted" and leaves the block pointers alone.
>
> Your only hope is to "grep" for parts of your files that have been
> deleted and hope for the best.
>
> However, this is not necessarily true. All information might still be
> there, also the block pointers. It is just less likely that those are
> still there (than on ext2), since they have to be recovered from the
> journal. On top of that, the meta data is less coherently related to
> the real data so that heuristic algorithms are needed to find things
> back. Every time a file is accessed, it's Access Time is changed, and
> it's inode is written to disk, along with 31 other inodes that reside
> in the same block. When that happens, a copy of that block is written
> to the journal. Therefore, if your partition isn't too large compared
> to your journal, and if you at least recently accessed the files you
> want to recover, you might be able to recover the block pointers from
> the journal."
>
> [1]http://code.google.com/p/ext3grep/
> [2]http://www.xs4all.nl/~carlo17/howto/undelete_ext3.html<http://www.xs4all.nl/%7Ecarlo17/howto/undelete_ext3.html>
>
> slds y suerte
> --
> Carlos Javier
> Habana, CUBA
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>



-- 
BCS Yarieldis Claro Soto
Bachelor of Computer Science from UCLV
Home: http://yarieldis.googlepages.com/home
Linux User #452555
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