Captive NTFS, a 'wrapping' driver that uses Windows' own driver ntfs.sys, exists for Linux. It was built as a Filesystem in Userspace (FUSE) program and released under the GPL but work on Captive NTFS ceased in 2006.[39]

It sounds like the suggestion to use ntfs-3g will meet your needs. I am in the category of "I can't think of a reason for this to break". We added support for FUSE in the kernel in 2016 which is what allows ntfs-3g to be installed and used. BRadM had a comment about this when discussing exFAT here.


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I'm trying to mount a Windows ntfs partition on openSuse 11.4. When I mount it using the root account (either directly or via sudo) it mounts without problems. But when I try mounting it without any root privileges, it gives me the following error:

As suggested, I tried to set the UID/GID bits on the ntfs-3g binary. All the files (/sbin/mount.ntfs, /sbin/mount.ntfs-3g) point to /usr/bin/ntfs-3g, so I changed the permissions on that. The permissions now are:

To solve similar problems in the future - especially with removable media (like USB disks), I'd recommend to use pmount for mounting filesystems as normal users. It uses a policy approach and saves you from doing system-wide changes, which can sometimes be dangerous (such as chmod 1755 /sbin/mount.ntfs-3g /usr/bin/ntfs-3g).

I am trying to convert my external hard drive from fat32 to ntfs. If possible, I want to avoid losing the data or having transfer it off and back on and formatting ( I have about 400gb of data).

[The hard drive is a samsung story 1.5tb drive] It arrived in FAT32 but I did not check this and began using it. For the past year I have been using it without any problems. Only recently had I started to deal with large files and suddenly I noticed that it is not ntfs and that fat32 has a 4gb limit.

1) opening cmd as administrator and doing a conversion there e.g: convert E:/ fs/ntfsThis failed. It said messages about the drive being in use and asked me if i wanted to kill these connection i entered Y and it would not convert.

If you are accessing a NTFS security style volume from NFS, there is no way to modify permissions from NFS. Setting the ntfs-unix-security-ops to ignore simply bypasses the error; it does not allow you to change access.

when open vmdk files, it shows partitions as files: 0.ntfs and "1".

in some files there are 0.fat, 1.img, and "2".

how do i open files without unpacking whole partitions?

it need to show partitions not as files but as folders

using cli

I created disk image with VmWare. It's 128GB disk splitted to 32 parts. I open disk image with 7-zip File Manager, and it writes "0.ntfs. Can't open file as [NTFS] archive". Then it shows files "0.ntfs" and "1". So i have to unpack all 128 gigs to enter the archive (i don't tried because it unpacks it to TEMP, where is insufficient disk space).

So you write that 7-zip file manager can do it, but it can't.

So if i need to unpack, then what it "can do it"?

maybe some unusual feature in ntfs.

Try to create new simpler ntfs/vmdk volume. 

And check 7-zip can open that ntfs in that new case.

Then try to find exact reason why some ntfs volumes work and some ntfs volumes do not work as expected.

That ntfs volume at some last unused mft record contains value magic=5. Thah magic value usually contains FILE or BAAD. Also zero value can be in unused mft record.

But 7-Zip didn't support value=5. It's easy to fix 7-zip to support it. So I'll change the code of 7-Zip.

What exact software was used to create and update that ntfs volume?

I want to know what program writed value 5 there.

And what version of Windows was used?

You could use btrfs and install winbtrfs on your windows pc. There is even ext?4 drivers for windows, but i think support is not as good as for btrfs, which in turn is the better option anyway.

Ntfs is missing the needed permission handling for nextcloud use btw.

The only other way to use a ntfs drive would be to mount it as external media in nextcloud.

I have very little knowledge to nextcould, so could you explain a bit more about how mounting ntfs as external media would solve the issue? Does nextcloud have an app or something allowing me to move or backup those database and config files into ntfs drive if I mount it in nextcloud?

Thats the Problem, 0770 permission does not exist on ntfs, windows permission handling works different from unixoids. There would be another way probably, that includes creating a virtual volume on the ntfs volume somehow and use that.

The mount type ntfs-3g does not need to be explicitly specified in Arch. The mount command by default will use /usr/bin/mount.ntfs which is symlinked to /usr/bin/ntfs-3g after the ntfs-3g package is installed.

By default, ntfs-3g requires root rights to mount the filesystem if it is a block device, even with the user option in /etc/fstab. See ntfs-3g-faq for details. The user option in the fstab is still required.

For non-blockfiles like normal images, ntfs-3g on the command-line should work out-of-the-box with normal user privileges as the underlying FUSE calls are redirected to the setuid-root fusermount when direct kernel interaction is unavailable.

Note that the important programs for resizing NTFS partitions include ntfs-3g and a utility like (G)parted or fdisk, provided by the util-linux package. Unless you are an "advanced" user it is advisable to use a tool like GParted to perform any resize operations to minimize the chance of data loss due to user error.

If you already have Arch Linux installed on your system and simply want to resize an existing NTFS partition, you can use the parted and ntfs-3g packages to do it. Optionally, you can use the GParted GUI after installing the GParted package. At the core of the resizing is the ntfsresize(8) command.

As an alternative to above clean shutdown method, there is a way to completely destroy NTFS metadata that was saved after hibernating. This method is only feasible if you are not able or unwilling to boot into Windows and shut it down completely. This is by running ntfsfix provided by ntfs-3g.

So I just spent the past week restructuring our share drive and security. I just started having people move stuff in and I noticed people were being named in the ACL by name and given full control on those folders. I have pinpointed it to the "CREATOR OWNER" ntfs permission that I left within my structure. Anyone who creates a folder is given full control off of that permission. I DO NOT want that happening. Can I just remove CREATOR OWNER from my share drive permissions?!?!? I am not sure what the fall out of that would be. Or is there a better way? Just give CREATOR OWNER Read access and let my security groups additional access right over-ride it? HELP!! I am in crunch time right now!

Once you have obtained Basic USB support, you now want to connect a storage device (USB stick, HDD, SSD) to your router. Using kmod-fs-ntfs will only provide read support. This HowTo will explain how to obtain full read/write support for NTFS.

In 2021 a new NTFS implementation was merged into Linux kernel 5.15 called ntfs3. There are numerous discussions comparing this new driver to NTFS-3G which is external to the kernel source but used for decades. See more information about ntfs3 in the FAQ. You can use either driver, provided you are running kernel 5.15 or later.

The mount binary seem to figure out what filesystem type it is trying to mount, therefore the code sections for checking this is removed. The script should be able to mount any supported filesystem. (so should it be in ntfs section?) be457b7860

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