This article is from a FAQ concerning SCO operating
systems. While some of the information may be applicable to any OS,
or any Unix or Linux OS, it may be specific to SCO Xenix, Open
Desktop or Openserver.
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Yes, it does but unfortunately it's not active by default (see the online manual pages for details). To activate it:
- scoadmin -> Hardware/Kernel Manager
- MAXVDEPTH = max number of versioned files
- MINVTIME = seconds after which files get versioned
To activate file versioning on a directory:
- undelete -s <your_dir>
Roberto Zini
John Dubois added:
You don't have to relink. Rebooting may not be a bad idea to ensure that you've set things up such that it will be enabled next time you reboot, but you don't strictly have to do that either. If you just want to try the file versioning (undelete) feature, you can set/change maxvdepth and minvtime on the fly:
mount -oremount -omaxvdepth=3 -ominvtime=1 /dev/fs-name
This affects only the current filesystem mount; if you want it to be enabled next time you boot you need to change it either via scoadmin or by editing /etc/default/filesys.
Also, it should be pointed out that file versioning must be enabled, both in the filesystem and in a particular directory, at the time the files are removed from that directory, or they aren't versioned and can't be undeleted.
See also http://aplawrence.com/Companion/Chapter06.html
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