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NTFS File Types
NTFS File Attributes
The NTFS file system views each file (or folder) as a set of file attributes.
Elements such as the file's name, its security information, and even its data,
are all file attributes. Each attribute is identified by an attribute type code
and, optionally, an attribute name.
When a file's attributes can fit within the MFT file record, they are called
resident attributes. For example, information such as filename and time stamp
are always included in the MFT file record. When all of the information for a
file is too large to fit in the MFT file record, some of its attributes are
nonresident. The nonresident attributes are allocated one or more clusters of
disk space elsewhere in the volume. NTFS creates the Attribute List attribute to
describe the location of all of the attribute records.
Table 5-3 lists all of the file attributes currently defined by the NTFS
file system. This list is extensible, meaning that other file attributes can be
defined in the future.
Table 5-3 File Attributes Defined by NTFS
Attribute Type |
Description |
Standard Information |
Includes information such as timestamp and link count. |
Attribute List |
Lists the location of all attribute records that do not fit in the MFT
record. |
File Name |
A repeatable attribute for both long and short file names. The long
name of the file can be up to 255 Unicode characters. The short name is
the 8.3, case-insensitive name for the file. Additional names, or hard
links, required by POSIX can be included as additional file name
attributes. |
Security Descriptor |
Describes who owns the file and who can access it. |
Data |
Contains file data. NTFS allows multiple data attributes per file.
Each file typically has one unnamed data attribute. A file can also have
one or more named data attributes, each using a particular syntax. |
Object ID |
A volume-unique file identifier. Used by the distributed link tracking
service. Not all files have object identifiers. |
Logged Tool Stream |
Similar to a data stream, but operations are logged to the NTFS log
file just like NTFS metadata changes. This is used by EFS. |
Reparse Point |
Used for volume mount points. They are also used by Installable File
System (IFS) filter drivers to mark certain files as special to that
driver. |
Index Root |
Used to implement folders and other indexes. |
Index Allocation |
Used to implement folders and other indexes. |
Bitmap |
Used to implement folders and other indexes. |
Volume Information |
Used only in the $Volume system file. Contains the volume
version. |
Volume Name |
Used only in the $Volume system file. Contains the volume
label. |
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