Provided by: ntfs-3g_2013.1.13AR.1-2ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ntfs-3g - Third Generation Read/Write NTFS Driver

SYNOPSIS

       ntfs-3g [-o option[,...]]  volume mount_point
       mount -t ntfs-3g [-o option[,...]]  volume mount_point
       lowntfs-3g [-o option[,...]]  volume mount_point
       mount -t lowntfs-3g [-o option[,...]]  volume mount_point

DESCRIPTION

       ntfs-3g  is  an  NTFS  driver, which can create, remove, rename, move files, directories, hard links, and
       streams; it can read and write files, including streams, sparse files and transparently compressed files;
       it  can  handle  special  files  like  symbolic  links, devices, and FIFOs; moreover it provides standard
       management of file ownership and permissions, including POSIX ACLs.

       It comes in two variants ntfs-3g and lowntfs-3g with  a  few  differences  mentioned  below  in  relevant
       options descriptions.

       The volume to be mounted can be either a block device or an image file.

   Windows hibernation and fast restarting
       On  computers  which  can  be dual-booted into Windows or Linux, Windows has to be fully shut down before
       booting into Linux, otherwise the NTFS file systems on internal disks may  be  left  in  an  inconsistent
       state and changes made by Linux may be ignored by Windows.

       So,  Windows  may  not  be  left  in  hibernation when starting Linux, in order to avoid inconsistencies.
       Moreover, the fast restart feature available on recent Windows systems has to be disabled.  This  can  be
       achieved  by  issuing  as  an  Administrator the Windows command which disables both hibernation and fast
       restarting :

              powercfg /h off

   Access Handling and Security
       By default, files and directories are owned by the effective user and group of the mounting process,  and
       everybody  has  full  read,  write,  execution  and  directory browsing permissions.  You can also assign
       permissions to a single user by using the uid and/or the gid options together with the  umask,  or  fmask
       and dmask options.

       Doing so, Windows users have full access to the files created by ntfs-3g.

       But,  by setting the permissions option, you can benefit from the full ownership and permissions features
       as defined by  POSIX.  Moreover,  by  defining  a  Windows-to-Linux  user  mapping,  the  ownerships  and
       permissions are even applied to Windows users and conversely.

       If ntfs-3g is set setuid-root then non-root users will be also able to mount volumes.

   Windows Filename Compatibility
       NTFS  supports several filename namespaces: DOS, Win32 and POSIX. While the ntfs-3g driver handles all of
       them, it always creates new files in the POSIX namespace for  maximum  portability  and  interoperability
       reasons.   This  means  that  filenames  are case sensitive and all characters are allowed except '/' and
       '\0'. This is perfectly  legal  on  Windows,  though  some  application  may  get  confused.  The  option
       windows_names may be used to apply Windows restrictions to new file names.

   Alternate Data Streams (ADS)
       NTFS  stores  all data in streams. Every file has exactly one unnamed data stream and can have many named
       data streams.  The size of a file is the size of its unnamed data stream.  By default, ntfs-3g will  only
       read the unnamed data stream.

       By using the options "streams_interface=windows", with the ntfs-3g driver (not possible with lowntfs-3g),
       you will be able to read any named data streams, simply by specifying the stream's name  after  a  colon.
       For example:

              cat some.mp3:artist

       Named  data  streams act like normal files, so you can read from them, write to them and even delete them
       (using rm).  You can list all the named data streams  a  file  has  by  getting  the  "ntfs.streams.list"
       extended attribute.

OPTIONS

       Below is a summary of the options that ntfs-3g accepts.

       uid=value and gid=value
              Set  the owner and the group of files and directories. The values are numerical.  The defaults are
              the uid and gid of the current process.

       umask=value
              Set the  bitmask of the file and directory permissions that are not present. The value is given in
              octal. The default value is 0 which means full access to everybody.

       fmask=value
              Set  the   bitmask of the file permissions that are not present.  The value is given in octal. The
              default value is 0 which means full access to everybody.

       dmask=value
              Set the  bitmask of the directory permissions that are not present. The value is given  in  octal.
              The default value is 0 which means full access to everybody.

       usermapping=file-name
              Use  file file-name as the user mapping file instead of the default .NTFS-3G/UserMapping. If file-
              name defines a full path, the file must be located  on  a  partition  previously  mounted.  If  it
              defines a relative path, it is interpreted relative to the root of NTFS partition being mounted.

              When a user mapping file is defined, the options uid=, gid=, umask=, fmask=, dmask= and silent are
              ignored.

       permissions
              Set standard permissions on created files and use standard access control.  This option is set  by
              default when a user mapping file is present.

       acl    Enable  setting  Posix ACLs on created files and use them for access control.  This option is only
              available on specific builds. It is set by default when a user mapping file  is  present  and  the
              permissions mount option is not set.

       inherit
              When  creating  a  new file, set its initial protections according to inheritance rules defined in
              parent directory. These rules deviate from  Posix  specifications,  but  yield  a  better  Windows
              compatibility.  The compression option or a valid user mapping file is required for this option to
              be effective.

       ro     Mount filesystem read-only. Useful if Windows is hibernated or the NTFS journal file is unclean.

       locale=value
              This option can be useful when wanting a language specific  locale  environment.   It  is  however
              discouraged as it leads to files with untranslatable chars to not be visible.

       force  This option is obsolete. It has been superseded by the recover and norecover options.

       recover
              Recover  and  try  to  mount  a partition which was not unmounted properly by Windows. The Windows
              logfile is cleared, which may cause inconsistencies.  Currently this is the default option.

       norecover
              Do not try to mount a partition which was not unmounted properly by Windows.

       ignore_case (only with lowntfs-3g)
              Ignore character case when accessing a file (FOO, Foo, foo, etc. designate  the  same  file).  All
              files are displayed with lower case in directory listings.

       remove_hiberfile
              Unlike  in  case  of  read-only  mount,  the  read-write  mount  is  denied  if the NTFS volume is
              hibernated. One needs either to resume Windows and shutdown it properly, or use this option  which
              will  remove  the Windows hibernation file. Please note, this means that the saved Windows session
              will be completely lost. Use this option under your own responsibility.

       atime, noatime, relatime
              The atime option updates inode access time for each access.

              The noatime option disables inode access time updates which  can  speed  up  file  operations  and
              prevent sleeping (notebook) disks spinning up too often thus saving energy and disk lifetime.

              The  relatime option is very similar to noatime.  It updates inode access times relative to modify
              or change time.  The access time is only updated if the previous access time was earlier than  the
              current  modify or change time. Unlike noatime this option doesn't break applications that need to
              know if a file has been read since the last time it was modified.  This is the default behaviour.

       delay_mtime[= value]
              Only update the file modification time and the file change time of a file when  it  is  closed  or
              when  the  indicated  delay  since  the  previous  update has elapsed. The argument is a number of
              seconds, with a default value of 60.  This is mainly useful for big files which are kept open  for
              a  long  time  and written to without changing their size, such as databases or file system images
              mounted as loop.

       show_sys_files
              Show the metafiles in  directory  listings.  Otherwise  the  default  behaviour  is  to  hide  the
              metafiles,  which  are  special files used to store the NTFS structure. Please note that even when
              this  option  is  specified,  "$MFT"  may  not  be  visible  due  to  a  glibc  bug.  Furthermore,
              irrespectively  of show_sys_files, all files are accessible by name, for example you can always do
              "ls -l '$UpCase'".

       hide_hid_files
              Hide the hidden files and directories in directory listings,  the  hidden  files  and  directories
              being  the  ones  whose  NTFS  attribute  have  the hidden flag set.  The hidden files will not be
              selected when using wildcards in commands, but all files and directories remain accessible by full
              name,  for  example  you  can  always  display  the  Windows  trash  bin  directory  by  : "ls -ld
              '$RECYCLE.BIN'".

       hide_dot_files
              Set the hidden flag in the NTFS attribute for created files and directories whose first  character
              of the name is a dot. Such files and directories normally do not appear in directory listings, and
              when the flag is set they do not appear in Windows directory displays  either.   When  a  file  is
              renamed or linked with a new name, the hidden flag is adjusted to the latest name.

       windows_names
              This  option  prevents  files,  directories  and extended attributes to be created with a name not
              allowed by windows, either because it contains some not allowed  character  (which  are  the  nine
              characters " * / : < > ? \ | and those whose code is less than 0x20) or because the last character
              is a space or a dot. Existing such files can still be read (and renamed).

       allow_other
              This option overrides the security measure restricting  file  access  to  the  user  mounting  the
              filesystem.  This  option  is  only allowed to root, but this restriction can be overridden by the
              'user_allow_other' option in the /etc/fuse.conf file.

       max_read=value
              With this option the maximum size of read operations can be set.  The default is  infinite.   Note
              that the size of read requests is limited anyway to 32 pages (which is 128kbyte on i386).

       silent Do  nothing,  without  returning  any  error,  on chmod and chown operations, when the permissions
              option is not set and no user mapping file is defined. This option is on by default.

       no_def_opts
              By default ntfs-3g acts as if "silent" (ignore errors on chmod and  chown),  "allow_other"  (allow
              any  user  to access files) and "nonempty" (allow mounting on non-empty directories) were set, and
              "no_def_opts" cancels these default options.

       streams_interface=value
              This option controls how the user can access Alternate Data Streams (ADS) or in other words, named
              data  streams.  It can be set to, one of none, windows or xattr. If the option is set to none, the
              user will have no access to the named data streams. If it is set to  windows  (not  possible  with
              lowntfs-3g), then the user can access them just like in Windows (eg. cat file:stream). If it's set
              to xattr, then the named data streams are mapped to xattrs and  user  can  manipulate  them  using
              {get,set}fattr utilities. The default is xattr.

       user_xattr
              Same as streams_interface=xattr.

       efs_raw
              This  option  should only be used in backup or restore situation.  It changes the apparent size of
              files and the behavior of read and write operation so  that  encrypted  files  can  be  saved  and
              restored  without  being  decrypted. The user.ntfs.efsinfo extended attribute has also to be saved
              and restored for the file to be decrypted.

       compression
              This option enables  creating  new  transparently  compressed  files  in  directories  marked  for
              compression. A directory is marked for compression by setting the bit 11 (value 0x00000800) in its
              Windows attribute. In such a directory, new files are created compressed  and  new  subdirectories
              are themselves marked for compression. The option and the flag have no effect on existing files.

       nocompression
              This  option  disables  creating  new  transparently  compressed  files  in directories marked for
              compression. Existing compressed files can still be  read  and  updated.  Currently  this  is  the
              default option.

       big_writes
              This  option prevents fuse from splitting write buffers into 4K chunks, enabling big write buffers
              to be transferred from the application in a single step (up to some system limit,  generally  128K
              bytes).

       debug  Makes ntfs-3g to print a lot of debug output from libntfs-3g and FUSE.

       no_detach
              Makes ntfs-3g to not detach from terminal and print some debug output.

USER MAPPING

       NTFS  uses  specific  ids to record the ownership of files instead of the uid and gid used by Linux. As a
       consequence a mapping between the ids has to be defined for ownerships  to  be  recorded  into  NTFS  and
       recognized.

       By default, this mapping is fetched from the file .NTFS-3G/UserMapping located in the NTFS partition. The
       option usermapping= may be used to define another location. When the option permissions  is  set  and  no
       mapping file is found, a default mapping is used.

       Each  line  in  the  user  mapping  file  defines a mapping. It is organized in three fields separated by
       colons. The first field identifies a uid, the second field identifies a gid and the third one  identifies
       the corresponding NTFS id, known as a SID. The uid and the gid are optional and defining both of them for
       the same SID is not recommended.

       If no interoperation with Windows is needed, you can use the option  permissions  to  define  a  standard
       mapping. Alternately, you may define your own mapping by setting a single default mapping with no uid and
       gid. In both cases, files created on Linux will appear to Windows as owned by a foreign user,  and  files
       created  on  Windows will appear to Linux as owned by root. Just copy the example below and replace the 9
       and 10-digit numbers by any number not greater than 4294967295. The resulting behavior is the same as the
       one with the option permission set with no ownership option and no user mapping file available.

              ::S-1-5-21-3141592653-589793238-462643383-10000

       If  a strong interoperation with Windows is needed, the mapping has to be defined for each user and group
       known in both system, and the SIDs used by Windows has to be collected. This will lead to a user  mapping
       file like :

              john::S-1-5-21-3141592653-589793238-462643383-1008
              mary::S-1-5-21-3141592653-589793238-462643383-1009
              :smith:S-1-5-21-3141592653-589793238-462643383-513 ::S-1-5-21-3141592653-589793238-462643383-10000

       The utility ntfs-3g.usermap may be used to create such a user mapping file.

EXAMPLES

       Mount /dev/sda1 to /mnt/windows:

              ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /mnt/windows
       or
              mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /mnt/windows

       Mount the ntfs data partition /dev/sda3 to /mnt/data with standard Linux permissions applied :

              ntfs-3g -o permissions /dev/sda3 /mnt/data
       or
              mount -t ntfs-3g -o permissions /dev/sda3 /mnt/data

       Read-only mount /dev/sda5 to /home/user/mnt and make user with uid 1000 to be the owner of all files:

              ntfs-3g /dev/sda5 /home/user/mnt -o ro,uid=1000

       /etc/fstab  entry  for the above (the sixth and last field has to be zero to avoid a file system check at
       boot time) :

              /dev/sda5 /home/user/mnt ntfs-3g ro,uid=1000 0 0

       Unmount /mnt/windows:

              umount /mnt/windows

EXIT CODES

       To facilitate the use of the ntfs-3g driver in scripts, an exit code is returned to give an indication of
       the  mountability status of a volume. Value 0 means success, and all other ones mean an error. The unique
       error codes are documented in the ntfs-3g.probe(8) manual page.

KNOWN ISSUES

       Please see

              http://www.tuxera.com/support/

       for common questions and known issues.  If you would find a new one in the latest release of the software
       then  please  send  an  email  describing  it  in  detail.  You  can  contact the development team on the
       ntfs-3g-devel@lists.sf.net address.

AUTHORS

       ntfs-3g was based on and a major improvement  to  ntfsmount  and  libntfs  which  were  written  by  Yura
       Pakhuchiy  and  the  Linux-NTFS  team.  The improvements were made, the ntfs-3g project was initiated and
       currently led by long time Linux-NTFS team developer Szabolcs Szakacsits (szaka@tuxera.com).

THANKS

       Several people made heroic efforts, often over five or more years which resulted the ntfs-3g driver. Most
       importantly  they  are  Anton  Altaparmakov, Jean-Pierre André, Richard Russon, Szabolcs Szakacsits, Yura
       Pakhuchiy, Yuval Fledel, and the author of the  groundbreaking  FUSE  filesystem  development  framework,
       Miklos Szeredi.

SEE ALSO

       ntfs-3g.probe(8), ntfsprogs(8), attr(5), getfattr(1)