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I have a bit of a conundrum.

Yesterday I was organizing some home video archives, and I accidentally moved a file into the wrong folder of about 3000 other clips, before copying said folder onto a new disk and wiping the original.

They're records of battery testing, so thumbnails all visually very similar - which means finding this clip again will mean going through each clip, one at a time. Sadly they all have the same creation/modification timestamps now too, so can't even get a hint there.

The only hope is - I watched the file before moving it yesterday. So I'm hoping that SOMEWHERE on that ubuntu machine, there's a log file that says I accessed [filename].mp4, which I can then search for in the new archive.

So - for the forensics experts out there - are there any logs in the system that track what media files are played/opened. I was using the MPV deb at the time.

Thanks!

  • Does this answer your question? [Where are ALL ubuntu logs/terminal history stored](https://askubuntu.com/questions/297053/where-are-all-ubuntu-logs-terminal-history-stored) – graham Sep 29 '22 at 13:20
  • Well, I've previously turned off the " ~/.local/share/recently-used.xbel " history, and I dont user terminal at all. Firefox wasn't involved in this either so that just leaves /var/log...there seem to be a lot of files in there and most aren't readable for some reason. Where should I start? –  Sep 29 '22 at 14:41

1 Answers1

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Not unless you added a script for it yourself.

Rinzwind
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