table of contents
EXTUNDELETE(1) | General Commands Manual | EXTUNDELETE(1) |
NAME¶
extundelete - utility to undelete files from an ext3 or ext4 partition.
SYNOPSIS¶
extundelete [options] device-file...
DESCRIPTION¶
extundelete is a utility that can recover deleted files
from an ext3 or ext4 partition
extundelete uses the information stored in the partition's journal to attempt
to recover a file that has been deleted from the partition.
There is no guarantee that any particular file will be able to be undeleted,
so always try to have a good backup system in place, or at least put one in
place after recovering your files!
OPTIONS¶
- --version
- Prints the version number of extundelete.
- --help
- Print a brief usage summary for extundelete.
- Partition name
- Name of the partition that has deleted files, such as /dev/sda3.
Could also be the file name of a copy of the partition, such as that made with dd. - --superblock
- Prints information about the filesystem from the superblock.
- --journal --superblock
- Prints information about the journal from the journal's superblock.
- --inode #
- Prints the information from the inode number of the filesystem given, such as "--inode 2".
- --block #
- Prints the contents of the block, called as "--block 9652".
- --restore-file path/to/deleted/file
- Attempts to restore the file which was deleted at the given filename, called as "--restore-file dirname/filename".
- --restore-inode #
- Used to restore inodes by number, called as "--restore-inode
2569".
Also accepts a list of inodes separated by only commas, such as "--restore-inode 2569,5692,6925". - --restore-files filename
- Restores a list of files. First, construct a list of files in the same
style as would be
used in the --restore-file option, and save it to the file "filename".
Then, this option may be used to attempt to restore those files with a single call to extundelete.
This form also reduces redundancy from multiple calls parsing the journal multiple times. - --restore-all
- Restores all files possible to undelete to their names before deletion, when possible. Other files are restored to a filename like "file.NNNN".
- --restore-directory path/of/directory
- Restores all files possible to link to specified directory to their names before deletion, when possible.
- -j journal_dev
- Specifies the device that is the external journal of the file system.
- -b block_number
- Specifies the block number of the backup superblock to be used when opening the file system.
- -B block_size
- Specifies the block size of the partition to be used when opening the file system.
- --before date
- Only restore files deleted before the date specified, which should be in
the form of the number of seconds since the UNIX epoch. Use a shell
command like
$ date -d "Aug 1 9:02" +%s
to convert a human-readable date to the proper format. The conversion from the number of seconds to a readable format may be found by using either of the following:
$ date -d@1234567890
$ perl -le "print scalar localtime 1234567890" - --after date
- Only restore files deleted after the date specified, which should be in
the form of the number of seconds since the UNIX epoch.
See the notes for the --before option for more information.
AUTHOR¶
extundelete was written by Nic Case <number9652@users.sourceforge.net> Copyright (C) 2009, 2012
This manual page was written by Elías Alejandro Año Mendoza <ealmdz@gmail.com>, for the Debian project (and may be used by others).
September 29, 2010 |