Re: Deleted files not releasing their space (was Re: syslog message wrt inodes)

2004-09-24 Thread Duncan Anker
On Wed, 2003-01-29 at 13:17, David Bear wrote: > The problem is that I am running snort and its creating hundreds of > entries in /var/log/snort -- one directory for each alert generated by > an IP address. then specific info on that alert in a file under each > directory. So -- aside from the s

Re: Deleted files not releasing their space (was Re: syslogmessage wrt inodes)

2003-01-28 Thread Duncan Anker
On Wed, 2003-01-29 at 13:17, David Bear wrote: > The problem is that I am running snort and its creating hundreds of > entries in /var/log/snort -- one directory for each alert generated by > an IP address. then specific info on that alert in a file under each > directory. So -- aside from the s

Re: Deleted files not releasing their space (was Re: syslog message wrt inodes)

2003-01-28 Thread David Bear
On Tue, Jan 28, 2003 at 08:27:12PM -0500, Lowell Gilbert wrote: > Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > > Let's see if I remember the details on this. > > I believe this happens when a file is deleted, but another program still holds > > a filehandle? to it. Thus, if you delete Apache's log fil

Re: Deleted files not releasing their space (was Re: syslog message wrt inodes)

2003-01-28 Thread Lowell Gilbert
Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Let's see if I remember the details on this. > I believe this happens when a file is deleted, but another program still holds > a filehandle? to it. Thus, if you delete Apache's log file (for example) but > don't restart Apache, the space the logfile is us

Re: Deleted files not releasing their space (was Re: syslog messagewrt inodes)

2003-01-28 Thread Philip Hallstrom
(skip down) On Tue, 28 Jan 2003, Bill Moran wrote: > David Bear wrote: > > I'm getting messages like below that I'm out of inodes on /var. > > > > asu.edu kernel log messages: > > > >>id 25 on /var: out of inodes > >> syslogd: /var/log/auth.log: No such file or directory > >> syslogd: /var/log/

Re: Deleted files - recovery

2003-01-20 Thread Bill Moran
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Though you might like to see the results of some relevant web-surfing. For data recovery on Windows and Ext2 file systems: R-Tools http://www.r-tt.com/ Tool to check and undelete partitions (not data) on: - FAT12 FAT16 FAT32 - Linux - Linux SWAP (version 1 and 2) - NTFS

Re: Deleted files - recovery

2003-01-20 Thread Mike Meyer
In <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED] typed: > There is an undelete function in FBSD. This suggests that native FBSD data > recovery should be possible. Writing the program or script to achive that end > is beyond my abiity I'm afraid. If you read the man page carefully, you'll see that "und

Re: Deleted files - recovery

2003-01-19 Thread bastill
Though you might like to see the results of some relevant web-surfing. For data recovery on Windows and Ext2 file systems: R-Tools http://www.r-tt.com/ Tool to check and undelete partitions (not data) on: - FAT12 FAT16 FAT32 - Linux - Linux SWAP (version 1 and 2) - NTFS (Windows NT) - BeFS (BeOS)

Re: Deleted files

2003-01-19 Thread Jeff Jirsa
On Mon, 20 Jan 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > You have given me a clue, however. I will look for undelete for UFS > You're not going to find anything of much use. There has never been undelete for UFS, for more details you can check the archives (this comes up from time to time) specifically:

Re: Deleted files

2003-01-19 Thread bastill
Quoting Bill Moran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > when I searched, this (http://www.tu-ilmenau.de/~mojo/undelete.html) was the > best I found. Sadly, that URL refers to ext2, whereas BSD uses UFS > I'm assuming that you didn't make backups before starting the conversion > process, > or you wouldn't b

Re: Deleted files

2003-01-19 Thread Bill Moran
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I made a boo-boo! Two in fact! :-) In transferring directories from one disk to another using dump | restore I forgot at one point to cd and put a number of directories into the wrong partition. So I deleted the wrong directories using rm -rf directoryname. Unfortunately