Difference between revisions of "Recover"

From NetHackWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (explain the 1031foo)
Line 5: Line 5:
 
where <tt>savedir</tt> is the path where the save file should be put, and <tt>1031foo</tt> is the file name of the temporary files, without extension. The number will most likely be different; it's the UID of the user running NetHack. <tt>foo</tt> is the player name used in NetHack.
 
where <tt>savedir</tt> is the path where the save file should be put, and <tt>1031foo</tt> is the file name of the temporary files, without extension. The number will most likely be different; it's the UID of the user running NetHack. <tt>foo</tt> is the player name used in NetHack.
  
 +
If you are using official Nethack and your distribution does not come with '''recover''' you can download it from the official download-page at [http://www.nethack.org/].
 
{{Stub}}
 
{{Stub}}

Revision as of 07:38, 19 April 2009

recover is the small utility program that comes with NetHack. It is used to turn temporary level files into a save file, for example after a power outage during a game.

On Linux and other unixen, you usually invoke recover like this:

recover -d savedir 1031foo

where savedir is the path where the save file should be put, and 1031foo is the file name of the temporary files, without extension. The number will most likely be different; it's the UID of the user running NetHack. foo is the player name used in NetHack.

If you are using official Nethack and your distribution does not come with recover you can download it from the official download-page at [1].

This page is a stub. Should you wish to do so, you can contribute by expanding this page.