Linux SVN recover files - linux

A recent update over unversioned directories removed a bunch of files. Is there a way I can manually recover these lost files?
P.S. I cannot recover them from subversion, as the files I am looking for were never committed to SVN control. I have looked in the linux trash folder, which only contains files which have been manually deleted.
edit: Actually, the files were lost through an accidental svn rm operation. Unfortunately I cannot use revert as the files I am trying to recover were newly created and not under version control yet. Any ideas?

If files were lost during a svn update operation, there's not a lot you can do. I would suggest looking for hidden backup files that your editor may have created (in the directory where the file originally was or in the editor's temporary directory).
If you remember the name of one of the files, you can try using find to see if there's a backup copy of it somewhere on the disk.

Related

Perforce deleted files from explorer, how to sync?

I have deleted a couple of image files from my workspace through the windows explorer (I left one file in that folder), then I went to my visual client and hit "Get Latest". Nothing happened, I worked through the terminal and did p4 sync -f in the parent folder, nothing was brought back either. I guess because I've deleted the files by hand Perforce wasn't able to relate to those files.
My workaround was:
Checking out those deleted files from the depo (it would warn that the file won't exist)
Revert them. The revert brought back the missing files from the depot.
Is there a better workflow dealing with that?
Use the p4 clean command. This will automatically re-sync everything that is different or missing (or, in the case of extra files that weren't added to the depot, delete them).
https://web.archive.org/web/20150107135057/http://www.perforce.com/blog/140501/p4-clean-make-workspace-shine

VS 2019 don't delete files immediately

I accidentally deleted a wrong file in Visual Studio 2019 before commiting the changes. I lost not a lot of work but I want to prevent this in future.
Can I setup VS 2019 somehow that files are not immediately deleted but kept in a cache for a while?
Supposedly there is already a backup folder which VS uses for deleted files, but this folder was empty in my case. And also the fact that VS moves files into the Windows bin doesn't help me because my repository is not on the system drive.
Do you know about any settings in VS or is there maybe an extension?
Not exactly what you are looking for but this extension could help you. It migth not prevent the deletion, but give you the opportunity to recover the code.
I haven`t tested it and I am also not sure if it will work with VS2019.
A visual source code plugin for maintaining local history of files.
Every time you modify a file, a copy of the old contents is kept in the local history. At any time, you can compare a file with any older version from the history. It can help you out when you change or delete a file by accident. The history can also help you out when your workspace has a catastrophic problem. Each file revision is stored in a separate file inside the .history folder of your workspace directory (you can also configure another location, see local-history.path).
https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=xyz.local-history
The answer here is to use a version control system (like git) and keep a full history of your project.
Even on simple personal projects it is worth doing.

Perforce deleting a file from workspace and reflecting that in Perforce

Is it possible to delete a file from your workspace and then hitting submit in perforce and that file being deleted from the perforce server?
open for read: F
\LocalSource\Perforce\MainBranch\blah\New Text Document.txt: The system cannot find the file specified.
Submit aborted -- fix problems then use 'p4 submit -c 4799463'.
Some file(s) could not be transferred from client.
I get this message when I try to submit. In Subversion I could do this. I had a look on the internet and it looks like this isn't possible, but I thought I'd check on here.
(The reason I want this is because I have a spreadsheet and I want to extract the modules from the spreadsheet and put them into source control. But sometimes modules in that spreadsheet may be removed and I want to be able to just checkin the modules that are changed and do deletions on the server, without having to go into the perforce client and deleting the files marked for deletion in there.) One method was to delete all the files in perforce and then do a dummy commit of an empty directory. And then add all the files again extracted from the spreadsheet and do an add. But then in my version history I always will have a version with a full delete.
Any simple ideas, special commands that I can use?
Thanks,
Chris
If you delete files directly on disk, without using the Perforce client to delete them (e.g., you use your spreadsheet command to delete those files directly), that's called "offline work", and in order to tell Perforce that you've made those changes, you just need to go back into your P4V window and use "Reconcile Offline Work".
See Working Disconnected From The Perforce Server for complete instructions.
See also this related question: Sync offline changes to a workspace into Perforce
Perforce has a command-line client (http://www.perforce.com/product/components/perforce_commandline_client) you should be able to execute from Excel as any exe file via the Shell function.

Perforce overwrote code that I forgot to checkout. How do I recover it?

I forgot to check out a source code file before modifying it.
When I get last revision, Perforce overwrote that file, so my work is totally lost.
Is it possible to recover the file?
For future use, update your client workspace so that you specify "noallwrite, noclobber". If noclobber is set, Perforce will not overwrite your writable un-opened files: http://www.perforce.com/perforce/doc.current/manuals/cmdref/client.html
Only if your editor or your operating system saved a copy or it's been modified long enough that it made its way to your backups. Perforce will not make copies of such files, it blindly assumes that you didn't lie and will always honestly tell it when you want to edit a file.
if you are using eclipse then its possible to retrieve the local version using Compare With -> Local history . It helped me.
This has happened to me recently. For some reason, after I "p4 sync"-ed my workspace, and do p4 resolve, I noticed that my changes to a file were missing. I'm not sure if my changes were not saved or I haven't checked out the file. But I really remembered that my changes were saved. :(
I have been using Visual Studio for development and it doesn't have local history unlike in Eclipse. Luckily, that file is a javascript file and I have been testing my application in Internet Explorer. Since IE does some caching on some internet data like js files, what I did is to check the directory where it saves temporarily files (Internet Options -> Browser history settings ) there you'll see different versions of the files saved. I did recover my files! It was really just luck!
After that incident, I installed a plugin for visual studio for storing local history of files everytime it's being saved. http://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/226c2108-9da9-407d-b90d-9783040d27b8
Best thing to avoid these cases is to:
branch out your files first into a separate devline during development and submit every milestones you accomplished
incrementally. In this way you'll always have versions of important
changes you do during development. After this you could
integrate it back to the parent branch/mainline.
http://answers.perforce.com/articles/KB_Article/Branching-Codelines-and-Merging-Changes
Hope this helps!
If you fired the following command (which is a FORCE sync option), only then will Perforce update ALL your files.. including ones which are WRITABLE. The only exception is that any file that you have OPENED in perforce will not be overwritten. So if your file was made WRITABLE using OS command, and not using p4 open.. they will get overwritten by p4 sync -f.
p4 sync -f
The other possibility is that you did p4 sync, and still perforce overwrote your writable files (which were not opened using p4) because your workspace settings don't have noallwrite, noclobber specified. Usually by default, these settings are already specified, so that Perforce doesn't clobber writable files.

How do I delete a file from depot, but leave local copy in tact?

I'm trying to learn Perforce and want to delete a file from the depot(easy to do with p4 delete, p4 submit), but that deletes it from the client machine dir structure as well. I want to keep my local file in my directory intact.
The only way I can see to do this would be to move it out of the hierarchy that is under Perforce control before deleting. I was able to get my file back by syncing an earlier version.
Maybe I set up my client workspace wrong? Or am I misunderstanding a fundamental concept of source control? The client workspace is /home/user and I did it this way so I could add any file under my home directory without getting an error about the file not being under client's root.
FYI - Linux client and server running P4D/LINUX26X86/2009.1/222893 (2009/11/12)
Any advice appreciated.
Thanks.
There is a way to do this, by going behind Perforce's back. Do the following:
Rename the file you want to delete to something new
Run p4 delete on the original filename
p4 submit the change
Rename the file back to the original name
I don't believe there is any way to keep a file you are deleting under Perforce. There is good reason for this, as if the file is deleted in the depot there is no reason (from a source code control perspective) to keep a copy in the client workspace.
I suspect the issue is the way you are using Perforce.
From what you have written it seems that you are using Perforce to backup/track files in your home directory structure. So the way you are using Perforce the "master" is in your home directory and the "copies" are in the depot.
This is not the intended use of a source control system as I understand it.
The master copy of all files are actually what is in the depot. From the depot, multiple clients (views) are made for purposes such as making changes, testing, and so on. The clients are transitory and can be created and deleted as required.
To do what you want to do you may need to rethink how you are using Perforce.
some of the other commands take a parameter that lets you fake the action, but delete doesn't. You could always make a new client, do the delete in that workspace.
In the Workspace tab go to folder containing file(s) to remove from source
Right-click on that directory (or from File menu) and choose Open command window here
Note - If you open your own command prompt in the source directory you may encounter this error:
"Client 'your-client' unknown - use 'client' command to create it."
Enter command p4 delete -k <file_to_delete>
Change will be added to your P4V Helix changelist ready to check in

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