06.07.2007, 00:38
Mantus\;p=\"41279 schrieb:so noch ein kleines problem:Auf eine andere NTFS Partition wirst du meinen: Mit den neuen Kerneln geht nur das Überschreiben von Dateien.
wie bekomm ich es hin das ich daten die auf ner ntfs windows partition liegen auf eine andere zu verschieben?
Zwei Hilfetexte aus den Kernel-Sourcen:
Zitat:CONFIG_NTFS_FS:
NTFS is the file system of Microsoft Windows NT, 2000, XP and 2003.
Saying Y or M here enables read support. There is partial, but safe, write support available. For write support you must also say Y to "NTFS write support" below.
There are also a number of user-space tools available, called ntfsprogs. These include ntfsundelete and ntfsresize, that work without NTFS support enabled in the kernel.
This is a rewrite from scratch of Linux NTFS support and replaced the old NTFS code starting with Linux 2.5.11. A backport to the Linux 2.4 kernel series is separately available as a patch from the project web site.
For more information see <file:Documentation/filesystems/ntfs.txt> and <http://linux-ntfs.sourceforge.net/>.
To compile this file system support as a module, choose M here: the module will be called ntfs.
If you are not using Windows NT, 2000, XP or 2003 in addition to Linux on your computer it is safe to say N.
Zitat:CONFIG_NTFS_RW:Dass es nicht geht liegt übrigens nicht an der Unfähigkeit der Linux Programmierer, sondern daran, dass NTFS Closed Source ist, und somit die Operationen, die durchgeführt werden müssen um es zu modifizieren nur erraten bzw. ausgetestet werden können.
This enables the partial, but safe, write support in the NTFS driver.
The only supported operation is overwriting existing files, without changing the file length. No file or directory creation, deletion or renaming is possible. Note only non-resident files can be written to so you may find that some very small files (<500 bytes or so) cannot be written to.
While we cannot guarantee that it will not damage any data, we have so far not received a single report where the driver would have damaged someones data so we assume it is perfectly safe to use.
Note: While write support is safe in this version (a rewrite from scratch of the NTFS support), it should be noted that the old NTFS write support, included in Linux 2.5.10 and before (since 1997), is not safe.
This is currently useful with TopologiLinux. TopologiLinux is run on top of any DOS/Microsoft Windows system without partitioning your hard disk. Unlike other Linux distributions TopologiLinux does not need its own partition. For more information see <http://topologi-linux.sourceforge.net/>
It is perfectly safe to say N here.