
Code: Select all
emerge ntfsprogs




I'm afraid you're confusing things. There are two totally different NTFS drivers. The old one is dangerous and the new, rewritten one is safe. The latter was written by a different team. They developed ntfsresize also and they say it never corrupted data, almost for two years, since it was released. Anyway, I don't think otherwise so many people and distro would use it, especially the big ones: Mandrake and SUSE.slycordinator wrote:Also, honestly I personally wouldn't trust "ntfsresize." Maybe it's been fixed recently but I think in the past it sometimes would corrupt data.
On the Captive NTFS user list I've seen many data loss, inconsistency problems the Captive driver caused. That's why I've never tried this wrapper driver out.There's also another NTFS project that uses the Windows drivers in some way.
Info at: http://www.jankratochvil.net/project/captive/
btw I've never used either one of these though the 2nd one has quite a few good testimonials.

That's a pretty sweet rescue CD. I'm impressed. Though I'd have to wait to use their "Partimage" program that's included until it has better support for NTFS. (and if you couldn't figure out "Partimage" is a Ghost/Drive-image clone for Linux).irgu wrote:
However true, it's quite cumbersome to use from the command line and that's why I use usually QTParted (nice GUI using many filesystem tools) from the the Gentoo LiveCD based SystemRescueCD. It makes the task totally brainless for me![]()

Why would you need to "lose" anything? If you include vfat support then you can mount fat32 partitions just like any other. And if you want NTFS then include support for it and mount it as a loopback device.Convex wrote:okay thanks for all your help NTFS still seems risky, but what do i have to lose in windows besides all my game saves. i'll think about it. thanks again

irgu wrote:I'm afraid you're confusing things. There are two totally different NTFS drivers. The old one is dangerous and the new, rewritten one is safe. The latter was written by a different team. They developed ntfsresize also and they say it never corrupted data, almost for two years, since it was released. Anyway, I don't think otherwise so many people and distro would use it, especially the big ones: Mandrake and SUSE.slycordinator wrote:Also, honestly I personally wouldn't trust "ntfsresize." Maybe it's been fixed recently but I think in the past it sometimes would corrupt data.
However true, it's quite cumbersome to use from the command line and that's why I use usually QTParted (nice GUI using many filesystem tools) from the the Gentoo LiveCD based SystemRescueCD. It makes the task totally brainless for me![]()
On the Captive NTFS user list I've seen many data loss, inconsistency problems the Captive driver caused. That's why I've never tried this wrapper driver out.There's also another NTFS project that uses the Windows drivers in some way.
Info at: http://www.jankratochvil.net/project/captive/
btw I've never used either one of these though the 2nd one has quite a few good testimonials.
