Issue the command: script BackupCommands This command will record all of your keystrokes until you stop the script by hitting the CTRL^D combination. Issue the command whoami to display your username on the screen. Create a file called whoami that contains the output of the whoami command. Create a file called myfiles that contains a listing of the contents of your home directory. Create a file called date that contains the output of the date command. Create a file called calendar that contains a calendar of the current month. Type CTRL^D to stop recording your keystrokes. Look at the contents of the BackupCommands file to verify that it did, indeed, capture all of your keystrokes and the output of the commands you issued. (If it did not do so, repeat steps 1-5.) Create a tar file named FNLNBackup.tar.gz (replace FN with your first name and LN with our last name, and make sure that the file is created using gzip compression). Include as members in the tar file your whoami, myfiles, calendar, and BackupCommands files (but NOT your date file). The tar command should use this formatting, tar (option1,2,3,4) destinationpath\destinationfile firstfile secondfile thirdfile Also the help for tar specifies using - options as the format, however, do not use the -, for instance instead of tar -xfv use tar xfv . Display a listing of the archives members and paste a screenshot showing the command you just issued and its output. Restoring Files Display a listing of your archives members and paste a screenshot showing the command you just issued and its output. Use tar with the option that list tar option archivefile Create a new directory called restored. Restore into your restored directory *only* your whoami file and display its contents. Insert a screenshot showing the commands you just issued, as well as their output. Then restore all of the members of the archive file to your restored directory. Display the contents of your restored directory and insert a copy of the command you used to display the file along with the commands output. Display the contents of your BackupCommands file and insert a copy of the command you used to display the file along with the commands output..