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you can use the utime function to fudge the books a bit. It looks like the inability to set the timestamp of a file is something mtp speciffic. In those rare cases when you want to lie to other programs about when a. The timestamps of the unpacked files have been restored correctly. I pulled it out of the phone, plugged it in another computer (Ubuntu 14.04) and was able to unpack another tarball without any errors. A QTime object contains a clock time, which it can express as the numbers of hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds since midnight. It turned out that the MicroSD card itself has been formatted using vfat filesystem without any encryption. Is the problem related to me using encryption? Is there any mount option or other magic that will allow setting the files' timestamps on a mounted mtp filesystem?

I normally wouldn't worry about it but there are files under Android/data that belong to applications that might be timestamp sensitive. This is confirmed by ls -l - it shows the current date and time. Telling me that tar is unable to restore the original timestamp of the files. If the named file is a symbolic link, utime () resolves the symbolic link. Is there is any command to see how many & When its lastly rebooted details Thanks in. If times is a NULL pointer, the access and modification times are set to the current time. I want to know the history of power reboot of switch. Tar: 00001.vcf: Cannot utime: Operation not supported The utime () function sets the access and modification times of path to the values in the utimbuf structure. After importing a module (here my clock.py I am busy with right now), I print the values again: Code: Select all. 2- Segundo paso: Baja por los ajustes del Utime U6 hasta abajo del todo donde verás el apartado llamado 'Sistema', pulsa para continuar.
#UTIME RESETTING FREE#
The files got restored but for each one I got an error message like: 00001.vcf I print the values of Used RAM, Free RAM and Net used RAM (the latter obviously zero during this first call). 1- Primer paso: Accede al menú de ajustes de tu dispositivo Utime U6, se trata del icono de la rueda dentada. run/user/1000/gvfs/mtp:host=%5Busb%3A001%2C017%5D/SD card$ tar xzvf ~/tmp/sgm4/ Utime (kpcibgnngaaabebmcabmkocdokepdaki): Converts UNIX timestamps to. Then replaced the card, formatted the new one and tried to restore my files: I replaced the MicroSD card in my mobile (Samsung Galaxy S4 Mini running CyanogenMod 11 with encryption) with a bigger one.īefore I pulled the old one out I backed up its content into a tar file:
