Directory Files
.. 77
lib 5
File Size
Kconfig 1.7 kB
Makefile 681 B
attrib.c 57 kB
attrlist.c 10 kB
bitfunc.c 2.6 kB
bitmap.c 33 kB
debug.h 1.6 kB
dir.c 12 kB
file.c 27 kB
frecord.c 76 kB
fslog.c 125 kB
fsntfs.c 59 kB
index.c 58 kB
inode.c 51 kB
lznt.c 9.7 kB
namei.c 13 kB
ntfs.h 37 kB
ntfs3.mod.c 0 B
ntfs_fs.h 38 kB
record.c 13 kB
run.c 24 kB
super.c 46 kB
upcase.c 2.4 kB
xattr.c 22 kB

Linux v6.6.1 - ntfs3

# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-only
config NTFS3_FS
	tristate "NTFS Read-Write file system support"
	select BUFFER_HEAD
	select NLS
	select LEGACY_DIRECT_IO
	help
	  Windows OS native file system (NTFS) support up to NTFS version 3.1.

	  Y or M enables the NTFS3 driver with full features enabled (read,
	  write, journal replaying, sparse/compressed files support).
	  File system type to use on mount is "ntfs3". Module name (M option)
	  is also "ntfs3".

	  Documentation: <file:Documentation/filesystems/ntfs3.rst>

config NTFS3_64BIT_CLUSTER
	bool "64 bits per NTFS clusters"
	depends on NTFS3_FS && 64BIT
	help
	  Windows implementation of ntfs.sys uses 32 bits per clusters.
	  If activated 64 bits per clusters you will be able to use 4k cluster
	  for 16T+ volumes. Windows will not be able to mount such volumes.

	  It is recommended to say N here.

config NTFS3_LZX_XPRESS
	bool "activate support of external compressions lzx/xpress"
	depends on NTFS3_FS
	help
	  In Windows 10 one can use command "compact" to compress any files.
	  4 possible variants of compression are: xpress4k, xpress8k, xpress16k and lzx.
	  If activated you will be able to read such files correctly.

	  It is recommended to say Y here.

config NTFS3_FS_POSIX_ACL
	bool "NTFS POSIX Access Control Lists"
	depends on NTFS3_FS
	select FS_POSIX_ACL
	help
	  POSIX Access Control Lists (ACLs) support additional access rights
	  for users and groups beyond the standard owner/group/world scheme,
	  and this option selects support for ACLs specifically for ntfs
	  filesystems.
	  NOTE: this is linux only feature. Windows will ignore these ACLs.

	  If you don't know what Access Control Lists are, say N.