On 05/21/12 19:52, Mike Miller wrote:
> On Mon, 21 May 2012, Thomas Lunde wrote:
>
>> Most of the answers so far (lsof, sync, etc. ) seem to have missed the
>> fact that the OP rebooted the box after deletion. Since no process or
>> file handle will survive that, let me ask:
>>
>> Is there any reason that there could be hard links on this volume?
>> Some backup systems use those for files that don't change between
>> backup runs. Apple's Time Machine is one example of a system that does
>> such, but there are many others.
>>
>> Using find or ls -l paired with egrep, check for hard links. You won't
>> get the disk space back until the last link to a file has been rm'd.
>>
>> Let us know what the ultimate solution is, please.
>
>
> Mr. B-o-B (the OP) doesn't seem like the kind of guy who would make this
> mistake, but my first thought was "wastebasket" only because that's what
> would happen to naive users on Windows. But regarding stupid mistakes --
> I can do things that no one would even believe were possible.
>
> Mike

Actually Samba does have a feature for a "recycle bin" when you delete 
from shares. I wonder if this is enabled on the Samba server.


Thanks.
-- 
Bret Baptist
Senior Network Administrator
Internet Exposure
bbaptist at iexposure.com
(612) 676-1946 x117

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