T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4031.1 | Gone into hiding. | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ BXB1 | Tue Aug 21 1990 09:58 | 9 |
| Re .0:
I've had this happen a bunch of times. It seems that if you move a
drawer's icon JUST A LITTLE or if you push it outside the margin of the
window where it resides, it vanishes! In most cases, I've found it
hiding (intact) in one of the other subordinate directories.
Obviously, there's a bug here. It's a REAL nuisance, but is eminently
avoidable and usually recoverable.
|
4031.2 | | MSVAX::BARRETT | I did not see Elvis | Tue Aug 21 1990 10:02 | 9 |
| Hummm. I've had similar things happen when doing the exact same
thing (mostly with personally created drawer icons) -- but the problem
has always been that the "item" got accidently placed into a drawer.
I finally decided that placing enough space between them was better
after all.
If they aren't hiding in a drawer (or the trashcan) I don't know
where they would be. Try the FindFile program to track them down
(on a Fish disk or part of the Cramden utilities).
|
4031.3 | You're not alone | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Tue Aug 21 1990 12:03 | 14 |
|
Ditto here!
This hasn't happend to me in a long time but I used to loose
directories very often and don't know why it stopped happening.
The good new is that I never "lost" the data, it's simply misplaced.
I generally use one of the PD find utilities to look for it.
I often wonder why the disappearing files syndrome went away. Since I
can't reliably reproduce it, I don't know for sure it won't occur again
but I can't ever recall seeing it since I upgraded to Amiga DOS 1.3.2
Frank
|
4031.4 | A500 or A2000 ? | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Tue Aug 21 1990 12:07 | 11 |
|
re .0
Ed,
Are you experiencing this on a 500 or 2000? Reason I ask is that
a long time ago I recall Roy (at the memory location) telling me this
seemed to be happening on A2000 only.
Frank
|
4031.5 | Expanded 500 | SHARE::DOYLE | | Tue Aug 21 1990 12:43 | 6 |
| It's on an expanded 500 system.
I'm still waiting to populate my memory.. so I'm running it on about a
bare 750k free.... Could this be causing problems?
Ed
|
4031.6 | I don't think it's memory related | MSVAX::BARRETT | They're laughing at me not with me | Tue Aug 21 1990 13:34 | 6 |
| It happens on my 3meg 2000, but only in certain windows or with
certain drawers. Since I "learned" how far to space things, I don't
encounter it very much anymore. I don't think it has to do with
memory, but I wouldn't be totally surprised if it had something
to do with window positioning or with which tool was used to create
the icon (or merge it).
|
4031.7 | MY $.02 | DECWET::DAVIS | You always get what you deserve | Tue Aug 21 1990 13:51 | 8 |
| This is a pretty common problem when manipulating drawers in Workbench.
The missing drawer is usually found in one of the drawers adjacent to
the one you were manipulating or, if you were using multi-selection,
the next drawer selected after the missing one. This is from memory so
the specifics may be suspect. I do not use the workbench often.
Usually when I want to manipulate many files and directories at one
setting I use SID v1.06.
|
4031.8 | Got 'em covered? | SDOGUS::WILLIAMS | TOPGUN | Tue Aug 21 1990 16:37 | 16 |
| True, it is common. But your case is special because you can't
find your files. The AmigaDOS specification indicates that dirs
are not circular, but guess what!!! You got it, you can infact
have a case of circular drawers. Since this is coming from CA we
might say they are "fruity" drawers. If you were to place them
on a loom, perhaps they would be fruit of the loom drawers, but
we're not covering that! You may want to use DISKSALV or DISKED
to look at the structure and see if you have droped a drawer into
a child and lost the drawer in a circular path. There is one other
bug in 1.3 that is rare too besides the "drawer-in-drawer" problem
and this is one in which the icons just disappear. Re-booting usually
solves the problem (I don't know what causes it). If you can't
find the drawer in another drawer and rebooting doesn't find them
either, then check for the fruit of the loom drawers.
TOPGUN
|
4031.9 | Now where did you get to? | CGOFS::R_RYAN | I used to be a coyote but Im ok nowooo | Tue Aug 21 1990 17:20 | 16 |
| r: .8
I have experienced the missing drawer syndrome on my 2000 running WB
1.3. Its happened ten or twelve times in the last couple of weeks.
I just added a 2091 and quantum hard drive and have been patitioning
and creating icons etc... all over the place.
Some times it seemed that they had not come back on reboot but on
scrolling the window I usually found it off screen somewhere. If not
a second boot would always bring it back.
It only seems to happen if you are moving icons around and performing
snapshots or creating new drawers/renaming them.
Does this get fixed in 1.3.2?
Regards,
Ron
|
4031.10 | 1.3.2 same thing | CSC32::A_ANDERSON | DTN 592-4170 NSU/VAX | Tue Aug 21 1990 19:45 | 7 |
| 1.3.2 has the same problem. It has happened to me many times on my 500
and 2000. But I tend to keep my drawers tight together. I use ARP but
can't you do a DIR #? ALL or something along that line to see if it got
dropped into another directory.
Alan
|
4031.11 | Wife is Jealous of Computer! Sabotage suspected! | SHARE::DOYLE | | Wed Aug 22 1990 08:57 | 26 |
| Well, on going over my hard disk with a disk editor, I looked for my
files using the search function.
I found a couple of them, but the program bombed out during the search
with a disk error!
I then realized that my worst fear had come true....
The other night I used B.A.D. to try to optomize my drive..
Since it's an 80 meg, I figured it take a few hours, so I started it
before I went to bed.
I turned off the monitor and put a couple of empty disks in the drive
to make it as un-annoying as possible and went to sleep.
When I awoke, my system had been turned off.
Yes, my wife was afraid to let it run all night (not haveing any faith
in my wireing of the hard-drive case) and didn't want to hear the fan
on the power supply.
I thought perhaps I'd been lucky, and she hadn't corrupted anything.
I guess I was wrong.
Maybe when I re-wrote the draws they were rewritten to a bad sector?
At any rate, I tried using disksalve on it, but that kept bombing out
as well.
Looks like I'll be spending a couple of days re-loading software on
the re-formatted hard-drive.
Thanks,
Ed
|
4031.12 | Lessons Learned | ULTRA::KINDEL | Bill Kindel @ BXB1 | Wed Aug 22 1990 11:09 | 21 |
| Re .11:
Not to preach, but this should provide several object lessons (a power
failure would have had the same effect as an over-cautious spouse and
probably even WORSE timing) for hard-disk users, in general.
1. Get (and USE regularly) a decent backup program. I've been quite
pleased with QUARTERBACK. Rebuilding a disk is NO FUN, even if you
have all the data stored elsewhere from which to do it.
2. Always ASSUME your first attempt to reorganize your hard disk will
end in failure. Know just what your recovery plan will be when it
does. (Pessimists are seldom disappointed. 8^)
3. If you're worried about leaving your monitor on and having some
image permanently etched thereon, use a blanking program. I use
ClockDJ, which allows me to specify the inactivity periods for both
cursor and screen blanking. It also allows display of the time and
available memory in a one-line window that you can place wherever
you choose. (Gurus often follow exhaustion of Chip RAM, so knowing
how one stands at any given moment is VERY HELPFUL!)
|
4031.13 | | DECWET::DAVIS | You always get what you deserve | Thu Aug 23 1990 01:00 | 17 |
| Having received B.A.D. with my Amiga500 I used it successfully on my
FLOPPIES. I've been running several hard drives on my amiga for over 7
months without any problems that weren't caused by myself. Having some
idle time and, unfortunately, rediscovering B.A.D. I thought that maybe
I could squeeze a bit more speed out of these slow (222k Read/s) ST-506
drives. I "blitzed" one of my hard drive partitions to optimize it for
the CLI and went to bed. Next morning I see a system requestor stating
that EH4: (the blitzed parttion) has a r/w error. No problem, I'll
just hit cancel and map out the bad spot. Welll, my system hung and to
make a long story short, I had to re-map and reformat my hard drive.
I verified that it will consistently trash MY hard drive partitions
by using it on a spare drive I had laying around. It lived up to
expectations. B.A.D. is bad(and that ain't good) ;^)
I promptly flung BAD(which is aptly named when used on hard drives)
into the lake behind my house. I retreived it later.(eco-consciousness
- and didn't want it polluting anything else). BAD is great for
floppies IMHO but is grief if used on hard drives.
|
4031.14 | | MSVAX::BARRETT | I will not skateboard in the halls | Thu Aug 23 1990 09:12 | 3 |
| I've used B.A.D. on my 30 meg partitions (both through Janus and
AmigaDos handlers) and have never had a problem -- it worked as
claimed.
|
4031.15 | What other choices?? | SHARE::DOYLE | | Thu Aug 23 1990 09:32 | 9 |
| Are there any other Hard-Drive Optimizers besides B.A.D?
I realize there are different file systems, but I must admit, the speed
of optimization using a utility such as Norton's on an IBM is pretty
impressive, compared to the tools available for hard-disk maint on the
Amiga.
Ed
(P.S. I friend of mine has "disk mechanic", but he says it will only
work with the slow file system.)
|
4031.16 | | EUCLID::OWEN | Penalty for early withdrawal | Thu Aug 23 1990 09:45 | 4 |
| I've also always used B.A.D. and I'm very happy with it.
Steve
|
4031.17 | An alternative ! | HPSCAD::GATULIS | Frank Gatulis 297-6770 | Thu Aug 23 1990 10:12 | 10 |
|
Another choice in on the way. Central Coast Software is about to
release a package called Quarterback Tools. This is a hard disk
utility pkg that does bad spot mapping, defragmentation, undeleting
files you accidentally deleted, plus some other goodies. This software
is done by George Chamberlain who wrote Quarterback. It's supposed to
be available either this week or next.
Frank
|
4031.18 | If it works for you, use it. | DECWET::DAVIS | You always get what you deserve | Thu Aug 23 1990 13:39 | 6 |
| I've read postings from those who swear by B.A.D. and those who will
not use it, like me. Whatever works for you. Central Coast Software,
the folks who market Quarterback, has a "disk optimizer" included in
a package called Quarterback tools.
md
|
4031.19 | Do you need undelete | WELSWS::FINNIS | | Fri Aug 31 1990 19:21 | 9 |
| I've got an undelete if you really need it ...
I believe it came off a Fred Fish Disk..
-Pete-
Do you have any figures regarding the defrag of disks ??
|
4031.20 | | MSVAX::BARRETT | I will not instigate revolution | Sat Sep 01 1990 16:51 | 3 |
| I've been looking for an easy-to-use undelete that works on hard
disks -- does the one you mentioned apply?
|
4031.21 | I'm waiting for quarterback tools! | SHARE::DOYLE | | Tue Sep 04 1990 09:16 | 6 |
| I've gotten Quarterback, boy it's fast!
I'm pretty impressed, I think I'll get the Quarterback Tools when it
comes out...
Ed
|
4031.22 | | WELSWS::FINNIS | | Tue Sep 04 1990 17:30 | 7 |
|
I believe the undelete I mentioned is for Floppys only but am not sure
because I can't find the readme..
I've uploaded it to Tape::user2:[upload]undel.lzh
- Pete -
|