You had mistakenly deleted a file – either through the Del key, or using rm in the command line.

 

In the first case, you can always go to the Trash, search for the file, and restore it to its original location. But what about the second case? As I am sure you probably know, the Linux command line does not send removed files anywhere – it REMOVES them. Bum. They’re gone.

 

To prevent this from happening to you, and a tool that you may consider using if at any point you are careless enough to do it anyway.

 

Create an alias to ‘rm -i’

 

The -i switch, when used with rm (and also other file-manipulation tools such as cp or mv) causes a prompt to appear before removing a file.

 

The same applies to copy, moving, or renaming a file in a location where one with the same name exists already.

 

This prompt gives you a second chance to consider if you actually want to remove the file – if you confirm the prompt, it will be gone. In that case, I’m sorry but this tip will not protect you from your own carelessness.

 

To replace rm with an alias to 'rm -i', do:

alias rm='rm -i'

 

The alias command will confirm that rm is now aliased. However, this will only last during the current user session in the current shell. To make the change permanent, you will have to save it to ~/.bashrc (some distributions may use ~/.profile instead).

 

In order for the changes in ~/.bashrc (or ~/.profile) to take effect immediately, source the file from the current shell:

. ~/.bashrc

 

The forensics tool – Foremost

 

Hopefully, you will be careful with your files and will only need to use this tool while recovering a lost file from an external disk or USB drive.

 

However, if you realize you accidentally removed a file in your system and are going to panic – don’t. Let’s take a look at foremost, a forensics tool that was designed for this kind of scenarios.

 

To install foremost in CentOS/RHEL 7, you will need to enable Repoforge first:

# rpm -Uvh http://pkgs.repoforge.org/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.3-1.el7.rf.x86_64.rpm
# yum install foremost

 

Whereas in Debian and derivatives, just do

# aptitude install foremost

 

Once the installation has completed, let’s proceed with a simple test. We will begin by removing an image file named nosdos.jpg from the /boot/images directory:

# cd images

# rm nosdos.jpg

 

To recover it, use foremost as follows (you’ll need to identify the underlying partition first – /dev/sda1 is where /boot resides in this case):

# foremost -t jpg -i /dev/sda1 -o /home/gacanepa/rescued

 

where /home/gacanepa/rescued is a directory on a separate disk – keep in mind that recovering files on the same drive where the removed ones were located is not a wise move.

 

If, during the recovery, you occupy the same disk sectors where the removed files used to be, it may not be possible to recover anything. Additionally, it is essential to stop all your activities before performing the recovery.

 

After foremost has finished executing, the recovered file (if recovery was possible) will be found inside the /home/gacanepa/rescued/jpg directory.

 

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