On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 10:35:49AM +0800, Aiza wrote:
> The man for restore says this.
>
> Note that restore leaves a file restoresymtable in the root
> directory to pass information between incremental restore passes.
> This file should be removed when the last incremental ha
Aiza wrote:
> The man for restore says this.
>
> Note that restore leaves a file restoresymtable in the root
> directory to pass information between incremental restore passes.
> This file should be removed when the last incremental has been restored.
>
> What root dire
The man for restore says this.
Note that restore leaves a file restoresymtable in the root
directory to pass information between incremental restore passes.
This file should be removed when the last incremental has been restored.
What root directory is this talking about?
If system is booted
ith the -r option assumes that additional restores may be
coming and so creates that restoresymtable file as an aid to help the next
restore
command determine which directories or files need updating, creating, or
deleting.
The restore "-x" option does not create this file, because it assumes
- Original Message -
From: "Dick Hoogendijk" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "freebsd-questions" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 09, 2003 11:03 PM
Subject: restoresymtable
> Inspecting the /usr directory I came across a >10MB file
> called &q
--On Wednesday, July 09, 2003 23:02:20 +0200 Dick Hoogendijk
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Inspecting the /usr directory I came across a >10MB file called
"restoresymtable"
Anybody got some idea where this came from?
Can I safely delete it?
How could it be created in the fir
Inspecting the /usr directory I came across a >10MB file called
"restoresymtable"
Anybody got some idea where this came from?
Can I safely delete it?
How could it be created in the first place?
--
dick -- http://www.nagual.st/ -- PGP/GnuPG key: F86289CE
++ Running FreeBSD 4.8