de358b5139
oo Turns out, it's pretty important if you use PAX for backup. In the man page for PAX, there is an error (OK, we could call it a "potentially catastrophic incompleteness"). It reads: > The command: > > pax -r -v -f filename > > gives the verbose table of contents for an archive stored in filename. Yup, it does do that. With a side effect: it also _replaces_ all the files that come in from the archive. As is my custom, I did my backup-validation real soon after the backup was written. Precisely because I've seen the same sort of thing happen on other systems. So all that file-restoring didn't do a lot of damage. Probably helped my fragmentation somewhat (aha, an online defragger?) It did confuse one hapless user, who lost an email message he _knew_ he hadn't deleted. Apparently the system restored the file as of just before that critical message came in. The correct entry should read: > The command: > > pax -v -f filename > > gives the verbose table of contents for an archive stored in filename. Submitted by: John Beckett <jbeckett@southern.edu> via the BSDI mailing list |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
cat | ||
chflags | ||
chmod | ||
cp | ||
csh | ||
date | ||
dd | ||
df | ||
domainname | ||
echo | ||
ed | ||
expr | ||
hostname | ||
kill | ||
ln | ||
ls | ||
mkdir | ||
mv | ||
pax | ||
ps | ||
pwd | ||
rcp | ||
rm | ||
rmail | ||
rmdir | ||
sh | ||
sleep | ||
stty | ||
sync | ||
test | ||
Makefile | ||
Makefile.inc |