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  2. NTFS links - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS_links

    In NTFS, an entity in the filesystem fundamentally exists as: a record stored in the MFT of an NTFS volume, the MFT being the core database of the NTFS filesystem; and, any attributes and NTFS streams associated with said record. A link in NTFS is itself a record, stored in the MFT, which "points" to another MFT record: the target of the link

  3. NTFS volume mount point - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS_volume_mount_point

    Mount points can be created in a directory on an NTFS file system, which gives a reference to the root directory of the mounted volume. Any empty directory can be converted to a mount point. The mounted volume is not limited to the NTFS filesystem but can be formatted with any file system supported by Microsoft Windows.

  4. Filesystem in Userspace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filesystem_in_Userspace

    However, the ZFS-Linux port of Lustre will be running ZFS's DMU (Data Management Unit) in userspace. [12] MinFS: MinFS is a fuse driver for Amazon S3 compatible object storage server. MinFS [13] lets you mount a remote bucket (from a S3 compatible object store), as if it were a local directory.

  5. NTFS-3G - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS-3G

    NTFS-3G supports partial NTFS journaling, so if an unexpected computer failure leaves the file system in an inconsistent state, the volume can be repaired. As of 2009, a volume having an unclean journal file is recovered and mounted by default. The ‘norecover’ mount option can be used to disable this behavior. [13]

  6. mount (Unix) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mount_(Unix)

    The mount command instructs the operating system that a file system is ready to use, and associates it with a particular point in the overall file system hierarchy (its mount point) and sets options relating to its access. Mounting makes file systems, files, directories, devices and special files available for use and available to the user.

  7. ntfsprogs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ntfsprogs

    Ntfsprogs was a collection of free Unix utilities for managing the NTFS file system used by the Windows NT operating system (since version 3.1) on a hard disk partition. 'ntfsprogs' was the first stable method of writing to NTFS partitions in Linux. [1] All NTFS versions were supported, as used by 32-bit and 64-bit Windows. ntfsprogs was a ...

  8. NTFS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTFS

    NTFS-3G is a free GPL-licensed FUSE implementation of NTFS that was initially developed as a Linux kernel driver by Szabolcs Szakacsits. It was re-written as a FUSE program to work on other systems that FUSE supports like macOS , FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD , [ 40 ] Solaris, QNX , and Haiku [ 41 ] and allows reading and writing to NTFS partitions.

  9. File system API - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system_API

    For example, the ext2 driver for OS/2 is simply a wrapper from the Linux's VFS to the OS/2's IFS and the Linux's ext2 kernel-based, and the HFS driver for OS/2 is a port of the hfsutils to the OS/2's IFS. There also exists a project that uses a Windows NT IFS driver for making NTFS work under Linux.