xenial (1) fatcat.1.gz

Provided by: fatcat_1.0.5-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       fatcat - FAT filesystem explore, extract, repair, and forensic tool

SYNOPSIS

       fatcat disk.img [options]

DESCRIPTION

       fatcat  is  a  standalone tool that allow you to explore, extract, repair and forensic FAT filesystems It
       currently supports FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32.

OPTIONS

       You should provide an option to fatcat, or you will get the help menu

       -i
           Display information about the FAT filesystem

       -l path [-d]
           Lists the entries of the directory path If -d is present, deleted files will be listed.

       -L cluster [-d]
           Same as -l, but using the cluster cluster number as source.  If -d is present, deleted files will  be
           listed.

       -r path
           Reads the file given by path

       -R cluster [-s size]
           Reads  the  file starting at the cluster cluster number. If size is provied, this will only read size
           bytes.

       -x target [-c cluster] [-d]
           Extract all the files to the target directory. If you provide a cluster with  -c,  the  extract  will
           start  with  the given cluster instead that the root directory.  If -d is present, deleted files will
           be extracted.

       -z, -S
           -z will write all your unallocated data to zero, and -S will  write  all  your  unallocated  data  to
           random bytes. this will for instance cause your deleted files to be unreadable.

       -@ cluster
           This  will  display  information  about  the given cluster. It will display its address, which is the
           offset of the cluster in the image, and the FAT entries (next cluster, unallocated or end of cluster)

       -2
           Compares the two file allocation tables and produce a full diff. This can be used to check  that  the
           disk is not corrupted, and have a look to it before trying to merge it with -m.

       -m
           Merges the two file allocation tables. This will only keep the allocated entries from on or the other
           table.

       -b backupfile [-t table]
           Backups your FAT tables to the backupfile file. You can specify with -t  the  table(s)  you  want  to
           backup (0:both, 1:first, 2:second). You can then apply the FATs using -p.

       -p backupfile [-t table]
           Patch your FAT table using backupfile previously backuped file (using -b).  You can use -t to specify
           the table(s) you want to patch (0: both, 1:first, 2:second).

       -w cluster -v value [-t table]
           Writes the cluster entry in the FAT to value. You can specify the table using -t (0:both, 1:first, 2:
           second).

       -o
           Search for orphaned files on the disk. This will produce a log listing files, directories and entries
           that are found. See -L, -R and -x to access those files and directories.

       -f
           Walks the directories from the root (/) and try to fix unallocated files and directories FAT table.

       -e path [-c cluster] [-s size]
           Display information about the entry of the path file or directory. You can edit its cluster  or  size
           reference using -c and -s.

       -k cluster
           Walks the directories from the root (/) and search an entry referencing the given cluster.

EXAMPLES

       You can explore your disk using -l:

       $ fatcat disk.img -l /

       And enter directories:

       $ fatcat disk.img -l /some/dir/

       You can read a file using -R:

       $ fatcat disk.img -r /hello.txt Hello world!  $ fatcat disk.img -r /picture.png > out.png

       You can also read files, including deleted ones:

       $ fatat disk.img -l / -d

       And extract all the files to a target directory:

       $ mkdir output/ $ fatcat disk.img -x output/

       Let's have a look at the listing:

        $ fatcat hello-world.img -l /
        Listing path /
        Directory cluster: 2
        f 25/10/2013 13:30:06  hello.txt                      c=3 s=13 (13B)
        d 25/10/2013 13:30:46  files/                         c=4

       The cluster of the files directory is 4, this means that we can list it with -L 4:

        $ fatcat hello-world.img -L 4
        Listing cluster 4
        Directory cluster: 4
        d 25/10/2013 13:30:22  ./                             c=4
        d 25/10/2013 13:30:22  ../                            c=0
        f 25/10/2013 13:30:46  other_file.txt                 c=5 s=29 (29B)

       The  cluster  of the other_file.txt file is 5, and its size is 29bytes, we can then read it using -R 5 -s
       29:

        $ fatcat hello-world.img -R 5 -s 29
        Hello!
        This is another file!

       For  more  examples  and  tutorials,  have  a  look   at   the   fatcat   tutorial   and   examples   at:
       <https://github.com/Gregwar/fatcat/blob/master/docs/index.md>

SEE ALSO

       fatattr(1), mkdosfs(8)

BUGS

       No known bugs.

AUTHOR

       Grégoire Passault (g.passault@gmail.com)