9.5
Table Of Contents
- Introduction
- System requirements
- Installation
- Using The Driver
- Mount options
- Additional Utilities
- Troubleshooting
- Troubleshooting processes
- Mount troubleshooting
- The install.sh script can’t find kernel sources
- Can’t compile the NTFS/HFS+ for Linux driver
- “Can’t load module” message at the end of installation
- ufsd module: kernel-module version mismatch
- ufsd module: create_module: operation is not permitted
- insmod: a module named as ufsd already exists
- insmod: Unknown symbol jnl_op (err0)
- Can’t mount NTFS/HFS+ volume
- Hardware issues
- Sysdump utility
- UFSD driver compatibility
- Frequently Asked Questions
- What are 'minor errors' reported by chkntfs utility?
- Warnings on Windows7/Vista when NTFS HDD is reconnected from Linux
- Recently changed file has its modification time a few hours ahead of or behind the current system time. Why?
- Why does mount option A make driver ignore mount option B?
- Does the driver have an optimization for avoiding data fragmentation?
- Why a lot of memory is used for volume mounting?
- Why the disk can't be dismounted?
35 Paragon NTFS&HFS+ for Linux 9.5
9 UFSD driver compatibility
This section describes file system features supported by Paragon NTFS&HFS+ for Linux 9.5 driver,
respectively.
9.1 NTFS features
Compressed files
Reading and writing compressed files is fully supported in both sequential and random orders.
Encrypted files
Encrypted files are read encrypted. During copy operation, file data streams will be copied encrypted
with loss of decryption capability.
Alternate data streams
When copying from NTFS to Linux FS: all additional streams will not be copied, along with compres-
sion flag and security attributes.
Hardlinks and symlinks
Any link will be copied as a full file with its body, losing link information. Maximum filename length
NTFS stores filenames in UTF-16 encoding. This may cause trouble when very long filenames con-
taining non-latin characters are used and UTF-8 is selected as default Kernel codepage.
9.2 HFS+ features
Case sensitivity
Both case sensitive and case instensitive types of HFS+ file system are supported.
Alternate data streams (forks)
During file copy operation (using cp command) on Linux only ’data’ fork is copied.
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