Tape backups. That's about your only choice. You could use your window manager's trash can instead, but no, once files are deleted, they're gone for good unless you backed them up. Instead, next time use "rm -ir blah" and it'll ask you "do you want to delte blah 1? blah 2?" and if it seems like its definitely deleting the correct files, they ctrl-C and rm -rf. I've never heard of an undelete program for linux. I don't think one exists. Even the ones for windows rarely worked properly. I know in DOS, if you delete a file, it just marks those clusters as capable of being rewritten, then hides them. I don't know what linux does.
-Eric Hattemer ----- Original Message ----- From: "Ronnie T Livingston" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, July 03, 2002 1:48 PM Subject: [luau] undoing a rm -fr * > Is there someway to undo a rm -fr *. > > -Ronnie > > > _______________________________________________ > LUAU mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://videl.ics.hawaii.edu/mailman/listinfo/luau > >
