This article refers to SpiderOak Groups or Enterprise backup. If you are seeking command line help for SpiderOak One, see the One command line articles.
The command line option --tree
will show the hierarchy of stored directories, and the journal number that corresponds to each directory. The contents of each directory is not shown.
Here's a snippet to illustrate what its output looks like:
$ SpiderOakGroups --tree Folder Tree for device #13: Puccini trunk: 2192: /home/warren trunk: 1002: /home/warren/Documents trunk: 1003: /home/warren/Documents/Maybe trunk: 1009: /home/warren/Documents/Maybe/Furniture trunk: 1035: /home/warren/Documents/Maybe/Furniture/Done trunk: 1036: /home/warren/Documents/Maybe/Furniture/Ordered trunk: 1037: /home/warren/Documents/Maybe/Furniture/To Order [snip]
Notice that the output organizes the stored directories in alphabetical order, one directory per line, and each directory's journal ID number is provided.
Use
To run this or any command, first completely close SpiderOak Groups, and be sure that all SpiderOak Groups processes have closed correctly. Then:
On Windows
Open a command prompt window. Enter the following text into the window at the prompt, then press enter:
"C:\Program Files\SpiderOak Groups\SpiderOakGroups.exe" --tree
On Mac
Open a terminal. Copy the following text and paste it into the terminal at the prompt, then press enter:
/Applications/SpiderOakGroups.app/Contents/MacOS/SpiderOakGroups --tree
On Linux
Open a terminal. Copy the following text and paste it into the terminal at the prompt, then press enter:
SpiderOakGroups --tree
Notes
By default, --tree runs on the device you are seated at. You can optionally specify the device you are interested in by adding the --device option.
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