Valeri Galtsev wrote: > > On Tue, November 24, 2015 12:38 pm, m.roth@xxxxxxxxx wrote: <snip> >> I'm trying to do a restore, from my CentOS 6 box, to a WinDoze box. The >> restore command is *not* user-friendly if you just want to restore a few >> files. And it gets weird.... First, I have to mark my path first - I >> don't just see it with ls. Then, when I do an ls, in >> c:/Users/<username/Documents/, it shows >> *MATLAB >> *My Music >> *My Pictures >> *My Videos >> *Visual Studio 2005/ >> *Visual Studio 2008/ >> *desktop.ini >> >> *None* of which are there. All that's there are teo files, testfile.bak >> and testfile.txt. MATLAB is in some other user's directory.... <snip> > > My case may be irrelevant as what I have is: server: FreeBSD 9.3, bacula > 5, still here is what I have on the server side for Windows 7 client: > > bconsole > restore > 5 > [here I chose the client] > ... > > You are now entering file selection mode where you add (mark) and > remove (unmark) files to be restored. No files are initially added, unless > you used the "all" keyword on the command line. > Enter "done" to leave this mode. > > cwd is: / > > cd C:/Users/[username]/Documents I cannot do that until I either mark or (thanks for telling me about "add") that path. dir or ls shows zip until I do. > > dir <snip> And it's still the same - it does not show the two textfiles in the directory, it only shows directories that are *not* there. It's as though the index is screwed. mark _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx https://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos