* ext3 and filename globbing with ext3
@ 2003-04-04 20:43 Trever L. Adams
0 siblings, 0 replies; only message in thread
From: Trever L. Adams @ 2003-04-04 20:43 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Linux Kernel Mailing List
Linux aurora.localdomain 2.4.20-2.48 #1 Thu Feb 13 11:52:40 EST 2003
i686 athlon i386 GNU/Linux
$ rpm -qa | grep openssh
openssh-askpass-gnome-3.5p1-6
openssh-3.5p1-6
openssh-server-3.5p1-6
openssh-askpass-3.5p1-6
openssh-clients-3.5p1-6
Okay, here we go. Earlier today, I erased several images from my local
working directory for a website. I updated several other things and
then ran the following:
scp -r pics user@site:/home/trever/somewebsite/
speachbubbleLONG.jpg 100% |*****************************| 2868
00:00
speachbubble.jpg 100% |*****************************| 3428
00:00
speechLONG-L.jpg 100% |*****************************| 2868
00:00
speechLONG-R.jpg 100% |*****************************| 2868
00:00
speech-L.jpg 100% |*****************************| 3428
00:00
speech-R.jpg 100% |*****************************| 3428
00:00
speechLONG-L.jpg 100% |*****************************| 4751
00:00
The speachbubble* were among the files I had erased about at least 15
minutes before hand (maybe over an hour).
This happened every time I used the command. However when I changed
into the pics directory and ran:
scp * user@site:/home/trever/somewebsite/pics/
It didn't copy those files, didn't even see them. An ls doesn't show
them either.
I have seen this happen several times before, I just realized for once
it is indeed a bug and not me messing up or imagining things.
My filesystem is mounted as ordered mode w/ ext3. Is this a known bug?
Trever Adams
--
One O.S. to rule them all, One O.S. to find them. One O.S. to bring them
all and in the darkness bind them.
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2003-04-04 20:43 ext3 and filename globbing with ext3 Trever L. Adams
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