This discussion reminds me of something else...

Alan Brown wrote:

On Thu, 19 May 2005, Arno Lehmann wrote:

As far as I know, NTFS has similar timestamps - atime, mtime and ctime - as normal unix file systems. I'm not sure, but I think I remember reading somewhere that under Windows you can avoid changing them when you modify a file.


There are more attributes than that and there are more access attributes
than just user/group/world too.

Well, sure, but those don't matter here :-)

For the most part Windows completely ignores them so debating their utility is somewhat of a gasbagging exercise - they would be useful if used though.

Some of them are used, though.

What's with Alternate Data Streams (or whatever that stuff is called)? I suppose they're worth saving :-)

Has anyone experiences to share? A quich grep through the sources came up with nothing.

Arno

AB


-- IT-Service Lehmann [EMAIL PROTECTED] Arno Lehmann http://www.its-lehmann.de


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