| bio | website | |
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| visits | member for | 1 year, 2 months |
| seen | Nov 7 '12 at 14:22 | |
| stats | profile views | 8 |
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May 3 |
awarded | Notable Question |
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Jan 8 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Mar 27 |
comment |
Need explanation on Resident Set Size/Virtual Size Thanks a lot! I am going to investigate the different options. You have been more than helpful! :) |
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Mar 27 |
accepted | Need explanation on Resident Set Size/Virtual Size |
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Mar 27 |
asked | Need explanation on Resident Set Size/Virtual Size |
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Mar 18 |
comment |
How to deliberately fragment a file You are right, however the disk image will be used to evaluate other tools. And it would be nice to use one disk image for all the tools (instead of creating specific one). I can use a running OS to generate user activities and such. Plus, a requirements of the project is to use realistic disk image. So fragmenting the file in the running system would be better but if I can't (or the results are too unreliable) I'll have to find a workaround, like working on the raw disk image. Another solution would be to move to Windows... |
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Mar 18 |
comment |
How to deliberately fragment a file I'am trying to evaluate file carvers such as Scalpel link and file fragmentation is a main issue for these tools. |
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Mar 18 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Mar 18 |
accepted | How to deliberately fragment a file |
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Mar 18 |
comment |
How to deliberately fragment a file Thanks for the answer! So it seems that I will not be able to do it on a running system. However, as I'm going to use a disk image, I can access the raw data when I've done the acquisition. Thus, I would bypass LVM and such. Now, I'll see if I can do something similar to your proposition on a disk image. |
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Mar 18 |
awarded | Student |
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Mar 18 |
asked | How to deliberately fragment a file |