![]() It explains errors then returns a 3, which means the return code documentation isn’t quite right, or maybe the return code here isn’t right… C:\Program Files\Duplicati 2> help returncodesĭuplicati reports the following return/exit codes:ġ - Successful operation, but no files were changedĢ - Successful operation, but with warningsĥ0 - Backup uploaded some files, but did not finishĢ00 - Invalid commandline arguments found Looks like it’s just what’s returned if you got past “No files examined, is the remote destination is empty?” which is 100, and “Examined files and found no errors” which is 0. If I had not checked the results shown on the command-line page, I would never been aware of the above mentioned error. This is more as a comment than a request for support. 14:17:17 02 - : The operation Test has started, I paste below the log I get from the GUI homepage for that test. What they implies? If one of these errors are on my 20 Gb PST file, this will make impossible to restore? Just a specific version of it?.How can I know which files and versions are affected by these errors.What can I do now to solve these error?.I get the following result on the “Running commandline entry” page:ĭ: 1 errorsĮxtra: pTh7g/UFWq8ybW66EvcKT62DCRS1NEdgyggvixyPJb8=ĭ: 1 errorsĮxtra: tRPvdixeOR7uBFfHXbVCM8BowTOthk9PbFMmLiU3KBQ=ĭ: 1 errorsĮxtra: jPZjna2BNElBBwicHW6xtFzY0KBWuMrGTvM5RW8aDOw=ĭ: 1 errorsĮxtra: ciOdv/NKQ00hQFfQBEBNIUEegUDWnUK9N9LbZiVIs7U=ĭ: 2 errorsĮxtra: URGA24ypHnaRTIky2vzh SeCxox4XnWwgO074k 4p9g=Įxtra: r1Vw9aGBC3r3jK9LxwpmDw31HkK6 R1N5bIyjeDoPfw=ĭ: 1 errors ![]() Each sample is 3 files so it is approx 25% of the files that have been tested. I have around 3950 Duplicati’s files in total on the remote server. recover.py recovery.jsonlz4 > done.I have run a test through the command-line on 320 samples with the option full-remote-verification. To tun, just pass the file path to the python script and it will output a html file with all the tabs urls (in a recursive tree structure if need be) My script will work with either recovery.jsonlz4 or recovery.baklz4 $FIREFOX_PROFILE/sessionstore-backups/recovery.jsonlz4 You can find the recovery files in the sessionstore-backups folder in the Firefox profile dir: Enter python and the rest is a simple script (developed through trial and error) which extracts all urls from the open tabs (there is info about closed tabs in the sessionstore.jsonlz4 file as well but my script ignores those tabs). Given that this js implementation didn't work in my situation, I needed to come up with a solution which didn't crash if I needed to extract the urls from massive json files. The JSON data contained in those compressed files contain a rich detail about your session" which can be used to extract the urls. In Firefox 56 , the files are compressed using Mozilla's flavor of LZ4 compression (.jsonlz4 or. As the description on the tool says: "Firefox creates various session history files as you browse, and then at shutdown creates sessionstore.jsonlz4. It has a great interface but it's slow and has mostly crashed in my use cases (my compressed session files can sometimes be as big as 100mb). One such popular tool is the Session History Scrounger which was written in javascript and runs in the browser. This issue has led many to create their own tools to try and extract all those lost tabs (urls) manually. And so you sit there with all your tabs potentially lost forever. I could never figure out why (probably the size of the session-restore file grows so big that Firefox can't process) and eventually there is nothing Firefox can do. Having said all that, once in a while (and I used to really dread those moments when it happened), firefox is not be able to resore my crashed session (which might have involed 1000s of tabs that I kept opened, hoping to bookmark at some point). managing crashed sessions/tabs) which chrome eventually copied (even though it's still not implmented as well as ff) has been my bread and butter and why I've stuck with Firefox all these years. Even if Firefox crashes, it always recovers nicely, restoring all the tabs that were open when the browser crashed (the crashed sessions can be stored recursivly which is the best featrure). ![]() I also love that Firefox lets me keep all my tabs backed-up. It is a tad slower than some of the other browsers overall, but it makes it up with amazing extensions and great developer experience. I know some folks love to hate on firefox, but as one of the only mainstream browsers that is not controlled by a big (evil) tech corp with various privacy/monopolistic concerns, it is my default browser. At any given time I might have 100s of tabs open across multipe Firefox windows.
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