Bryen wrote:
Is there any way to undo an rm in terminal?
No. Unless you want to spend a lot of money.
Probably not, but thought I'd ask...
Of course, in the 24 years since I started using Unix, there have been exactly 2 times when I rm'ed files which I didn't want to. The first time was in 1986 or 1987 when I accidentally rm'ed a C source code file. Fortunately, i had a hard copy print out after a recent edit. The second time was in a find command I was in /, but I had just done ls /tmp, and for some reason, I was thinking I was in /tmp,... a guy's /tmp was filled on his workstation, and he was all over me to hurry up.... I did a find . -name -exec rm \{\}\; I *SHOULD have done find /tmp -name rm \{\} \; about halfway through /bin, I realized something was seriously wrong, and hit Ctrl-C TOO LATE! I had to reinstall the OS (HP-UX) That was 1995. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org