What happens when the current directory is deleted?
In the first terminal A, I create a directory, enter the directory, and create a file:
In the first terminal A, I create a directory, enter the directory, and create a file:
One program created lots of nested sub-folders. I tried to use command rm -fr * to remove them all. But it’s very slow. I’m wondering is there any faster way to delete them all? Answers: Thank you for visiting the Q&A section on Magenaut. Please note that all the answers may not help you solve … Read more
Accidentally a rm -rf command was launched to my root directory instead of current directory. I stopped file removing by Ctrl+C but some files has already been removed. Is there a LINUX command to list all recently removed files from the system to get the affected applications ?
Is there a simple option on extundelete how I can try to undelete a file called /var/tmp/test.iso that I just deleted?
I have an hourly hour-long crontab job running with some mtr (traceroute) output every 10 minutes (that is going to go for over an hour prior to it being emailed back to me), and I want to see the current progress thus far.
Hi I have many files that have been deleted but for some reason the disk space associated with the deleted files is unable to be utilized until I explicitly kill the process for the file taking the disk space