Copyright (c) 2004-2007 Yura Pakhuchiy. Copyright (c) 2005 Richard Russon. This file may be copied under the terms of the GNU Public License. NTFSCP 8 "September 2007" "ntfs-3g @VERSION@"
NAME
ntfscp - copy file to an NTFS volume.
SYNOPSIS
ntfscp [
options]
device source_file destination
DESCRIPTION
ntfscp will copy file to an NTFS volume.
destination can be either
file or directory. In case if
destination is directory specified by name
then
source_file is copied into this directory, in case if
destination is directory and specified by inode number then unnamed data
attribute is created for this inode and
source_file is copied into it
(WARNING: it's unusual to have unnamed data streams in the directories, think
twice before specifying directory by inode number).
OPTIONS
Below is a summary of all the options that
ntfscp accepts. Nearly all options have two equivalent names. The short name is
preceded by
- and the long name is preceded by
-- . Any single letter options, that don't take an argument, can be combined into a
single command, e.g.
-fv is equivalent to
"-f -v" . Long named options can be abbreviated to any unique prefix of their name.
-a, --attribute NUM
Write to this attribute.
-i, --inode
Treat
destination as inode number.
-m, --min-fragments
Minimize fragmentation when allocating space to the attribute. This is
mostly useful when creating big files.
-N, --attr-name NAME
Write to attribute with this name.
-n, --no-action
Use this option to make a test run before doing the real copy operation.
Volume will be opened read-only and no write will be done.
-f, --force
This will override some sensible defaults, such as not working with a mounted
volume. Use this option with caution.
-h, --help
Show a list of options with a brief description of each one.
-q, --quiet
Suppress some debug/warning/error messages.
-t, --timestamp
Copy the modification time of source_file to destination. This is
not compatible with --attr-name and --attribute.
-V, --version
Show the version number, copyright and license
ntfscp .
-v, --verbose
Display more debug/warning/error messages.
DATA STREAMS
All data on NTFS is stored in streams, which can have names. A file can have
more than one data streams, but exactly one must have no name. The size of a
file is the size of its unnamed data stream. Usually when you don't specify
stream name you are access to unnamed data stream. If you want access to named
data stream you need to add ":stream_name" to the filename. For example: by
opening "some.mp3:artist" you will open stream "artist" in "some.mp3". But
windows usually prevent you from accessing to named data streams, so you need
to use some program like FAR or utils from cygwin to access named data streams.
EXAMPLES
Copy new_boot.ini from /
home/
user as boot.ini to the root of an /
dev/
hda1 NTFS
volume:
Copy myfile to C:\\some\\path\\myfile:stream (assume that /
dev/
hda1 letter in
windows is C):
BUGS
There are no known problems with
ntfscp. If you find a bug please send an
email describing the problem to the development team:
ntfs-3g-devel@lists.sf.net
AUTHORS
ntfscp was written by Yura Pakhuchiy, with contributions from Anton
Altaparmakov and Hil Liao.
It was ported to ntfs-3g by Erik Larsson.
DEDICATION
With love to Marina Sapego.
AVAILABILITY
ntfscp is part of the
ntfs-3g package and is available from:
https://github.com/tuxera/ntfs-3g
SEE ALSO
ntfsprogs (8)