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It’s also a measure of how well management does in response. We were transferring a software production repository from one machine to another, Lord knows why, when a junior admin I was supposed to supervise had arrived a half hour early and started the operation without me. He got the source and destination arguments reversed in the file transfer; we were using DD for this one part of it.

Management reacted pretty well. They assured both of us that while we made the mistake, it was not our fault that data was lost: the problem was that backups were not being checked, which caused us to lose the resulting three days (120 developer days) of work. The manager in charge of the folks doing the backup got taken to task - but nobody else did.



I did something like this once my senior year of high school. I was using XCOPY to copy a copy of Counter Strike: Source that someone had placed on the U:/ drive, but reversed the order of arguments so that instead of copying it to my desktop, I copied everything on my desktop to the directory.

For whatever reason, we had write access to that directory, but not deletion. I had to get the teacher to delete it for me.




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