Windows defragmentation tool do not update name offset correctly for unnamed
attributes, but chkdsk do not like when it negative, so do not change it at all
if it would become negative. (Szaka)
- Library no longer perform time updates, only provide API for this
- Remove ntfs_inode_update_{a,}time() and introduce ntfs_inode_update_times()
- Make ntfsmount properly update times
- ntfs_delete() now takes pointer to pointer to ntfs_inode for while to delete and closes inode only in cases no more hard links left to file
This adds crypto.[ch], several exported functions that you are not interested
to use and dependency on >=libconfig-1.0.1 to read list of PFX files with keys.
See libntfs/config for example configuration file.
* Add new API: __ntfs_attr_truncate that allow user to select whether holes should be created or clusters allocated
* Update ntfs_attr_pwrite and ntfscp to use it.
descriptor attributes (but not yet the security descriptors stored in
$Secure). (Anton)
- libntfs: Rewrite ntfs_upcase_table_build() to generate a Vista
compatible upcase table ($UpCase). (Anton)
- mkntfs: Remove own generation of upcase table, i.e. delete
ntfsprogs/upcase.[ch] and use ntfs_upcase_table_build() supplied by
libntfs. (Anton)
and include --with-uuid[=PFX] and --without-uuid options. (Anton)
- configure.ac: Set language to C. (Anton)
- mkntfs: Always set default cluster size to 4096 bytes regardless of
volume size. This is what Windows Vista does and it makes perfect
sense from a performance point of view. (Anton)
operations pread() and pwrite() respectively and fall back to using
seek() + read()/write() if no pread()/pwrite() device operation is
supplied or the OS does not support the pread()/pwrite() system call.
Adapt unix_io pread()/pwrite() device operations to use pread()/
pwrite() system call and adapt win32_io device operations to not
supply pread()/pwrite(). (Csaba Henk, Anton)
but passing all args as pointers and changing them there (especially
update_from that changes only inside new function, but rollback depends on it
in pwrite)