at v2.6.13 2424 lines 99 kB view raw
1/* 2 * layout.h - All NTFS associated on-disk structures. Part of the Linux-NTFS 3 * project. 4 * 5 * Copyright (c) 2001-2005 Anton Altaparmakov 6 * Copyright (c) 2002 Richard Russon 7 * 8 * This program/include file is free software; you can redistribute it and/or 9 * modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published 10 * by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or 11 * (at your option) any later version. 12 * 13 * This program/include file is distributed in the hope that it will be 14 * useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty 15 * of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the 16 * GNU General Public License for more details. 17 * 18 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License 19 * along with this program (in the main directory of the Linux-NTFS 20 * distribution in the file COPYING); if not, write to the Free Software 21 * Foundation,Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA 22 */ 23 24#ifndef _LINUX_NTFS_LAYOUT_H 25#define _LINUX_NTFS_LAYOUT_H 26 27#include <linux/types.h> 28#include <linux/bitops.h> 29#include <linux/list.h> 30#include <asm/byteorder.h> 31 32#include "types.h" 33 34/* 35 * Constant endianness conversion defines. 36 */ 37#define const_le16_to_cpu(x) __constant_le16_to_cpu(x) 38#define const_le32_to_cpu(x) __constant_le32_to_cpu(x) 39#define const_le64_to_cpu(x) __constant_le64_to_cpu(x) 40 41#define const_cpu_to_le16(x) __constant_cpu_to_le16(x) 42#define const_cpu_to_le32(x) __constant_cpu_to_le32(x) 43#define const_cpu_to_le64(x) __constant_cpu_to_le64(x) 44 45/* The NTFS oem_id "NTFS " */ 46#define magicNTFS const_cpu_to_le64(0x202020205346544eULL) 47 48/* 49 * Location of bootsector on partition: 50 * The standard NTFS_BOOT_SECTOR is on sector 0 of the partition. 51 * On NT4 and above there is one backup copy of the boot sector to 52 * be found on the last sector of the partition (not normally accessible 53 * from within Windows as the bootsector contained number of sectors 54 * value is one less than the actual value!). 55 * On versions of NT 3.51 and earlier, the backup copy was located at 56 * number of sectors/2 (integer divide), i.e. in the middle of the volume. 57 */ 58 59/* 60 * BIOS parameter block (bpb) structure. 61 */ 62typedef struct { 63 le16 bytes_per_sector; /* Size of a sector in bytes. */ 64 u8 sectors_per_cluster; /* Size of a cluster in sectors. */ 65 le16 reserved_sectors; /* zero */ 66 u8 fats; /* zero */ 67 le16 root_entries; /* zero */ 68 le16 sectors; /* zero */ 69 u8 media_type; /* 0xf8 = hard disk */ 70 le16 sectors_per_fat; /* zero */ 71 le16 sectors_per_track; /* irrelevant */ 72 le16 heads; /* irrelevant */ 73 le32 hidden_sectors; /* zero */ 74 le32 large_sectors; /* zero */ 75} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) BIOS_PARAMETER_BLOCK; 76 77/* 78 * NTFS boot sector structure. 79 */ 80typedef struct { 81 u8 jump[3]; /* Irrelevant (jump to boot up code).*/ 82 le64 oem_id; /* Magic "NTFS ". */ 83 BIOS_PARAMETER_BLOCK bpb; /* See BIOS_PARAMETER_BLOCK. */ 84 u8 unused[4]; /* zero, NTFS diskedit.exe states that 85 this is actually: 86 __u8 physical_drive; // 0x80 87 __u8 current_head; // zero 88 __u8 extended_boot_signature; 89 // 0x80 90 __u8 unused; // zero 91 */ 92/*0x28*/sle64 number_of_sectors; /* Number of sectors in volume. Gives 93 maximum volume size of 2^63 sectors. 94 Assuming standard sector size of 512 95 bytes, the maximum byte size is 96 approx. 4.7x10^21 bytes. (-; */ 97 sle64 mft_lcn; /* Cluster location of mft data. */ 98 sle64 mftmirr_lcn; /* Cluster location of copy of mft. */ 99 s8 clusters_per_mft_record; /* Mft record size in clusters. */ 100 u8 reserved0[3]; /* zero */ 101 s8 clusters_per_index_record; /* Index block size in clusters. */ 102 u8 reserved1[3]; /* zero */ 103 le64 volume_serial_number; /* Irrelevant (serial number). */ 104 le32 checksum; /* Boot sector checksum. */ 105/*0x54*/u8 bootstrap[426]; /* Irrelevant (boot up code). */ 106 le16 end_of_sector_marker; /* End of bootsector magic. Always is 107 0xaa55 in little endian. */ 108/* sizeof() = 512 (0x200) bytes */ 109} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) NTFS_BOOT_SECTOR; 110 111/* 112 * Magic identifiers present at the beginning of all ntfs record containing 113 * records (like mft records for example). 114 */ 115enum { 116 /* Found in $MFT/$DATA. */ 117 magic_FILE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x454c4946), /* Mft entry. */ 118 magic_INDX = const_cpu_to_le32(0x58444e49), /* Index buffer. */ 119 magic_HOLE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x454c4f48), /* ? (NTFS 3.0+?) */ 120 121 /* Found in $LogFile/$DATA. */ 122 magic_RSTR = const_cpu_to_le32(0x52545352), /* Restart page. */ 123 magic_RCRD = const_cpu_to_le32(0x44524352), /* Log record page. */ 124 125 /* Found in $LogFile/$DATA. (May be found in $MFT/$DATA, also?) */ 126 magic_CHKD = const_cpu_to_le32(0x424b4843), /* Modified by chkdsk. */ 127 128 /* Found in all ntfs record containing records. */ 129 magic_BAAD = const_cpu_to_le32(0x44414142), /* Failed multi sector 130 transfer was detected. */ 131 /* 132 * Found in $LogFile/$DATA when a page is full of 0xff bytes and is 133 * thus not initialized. Page must be initialized before using it. 134 */ 135 magic_empty = const_cpu_to_le32(0xffffffff) /* Record is empty. */ 136}; 137 138typedef le32 NTFS_RECORD_TYPE; 139 140/* 141 * Generic magic comparison macros. Finally found a use for the ## preprocessor 142 * operator! (-8 143 */ 144 145static inline BOOL __ntfs_is_magic(le32 x, NTFS_RECORD_TYPE r) 146{ 147 return (x == r); 148} 149#define ntfs_is_magic(x, m) __ntfs_is_magic(x, magic_##m) 150 151static inline BOOL __ntfs_is_magicp(le32 *p, NTFS_RECORD_TYPE r) 152{ 153 return (*p == r); 154} 155#define ntfs_is_magicp(p, m) __ntfs_is_magicp(p, magic_##m) 156 157/* 158 * Specialised magic comparison macros for the NTFS_RECORD_TYPEs defined above. 159 */ 160#define ntfs_is_file_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, FILE) ) 161#define ntfs_is_file_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, FILE) ) 162#define ntfs_is_mft_record(x) ( ntfs_is_file_record (x) ) 163#define ntfs_is_mft_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_file_recordp(p) ) 164#define ntfs_is_indx_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, INDX) ) 165#define ntfs_is_indx_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, INDX) ) 166#define ntfs_is_hole_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, HOLE) ) 167#define ntfs_is_hole_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, HOLE) ) 168 169#define ntfs_is_rstr_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, RSTR) ) 170#define ntfs_is_rstr_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, RSTR) ) 171#define ntfs_is_rcrd_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, RCRD) ) 172#define ntfs_is_rcrd_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, RCRD) ) 173 174#define ntfs_is_chkd_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, CHKD) ) 175#define ntfs_is_chkd_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, CHKD) ) 176 177#define ntfs_is_baad_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, BAAD) ) 178#define ntfs_is_baad_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, BAAD) ) 179 180#define ntfs_is_empty_record(x) ( ntfs_is_magic (x, empty) ) 181#define ntfs_is_empty_recordp(p) ( ntfs_is_magicp(p, empty) ) 182 183/* 184 * The Update Sequence Array (usa) is an array of the le16 values which belong 185 * to the end of each sector protected by the update sequence record in which 186 * this array is contained. Note that the first entry is the Update Sequence 187 * Number (usn), a cyclic counter of how many times the protected record has 188 * been written to disk. The values 0 and -1 (ie. 0xffff) are not used. All 189 * last le16's of each sector have to be equal to the usn (during reading) or 190 * are set to it (during writing). If they are not, an incomplete multi sector 191 * transfer has occurred when the data was written. 192 * The maximum size for the update sequence array is fixed to: 193 * maximum size = usa_ofs + (usa_count * 2) = 510 bytes 194 * The 510 bytes comes from the fact that the last le16 in the array has to 195 * (obviously) finish before the last le16 of the first 512-byte sector. 196 * This formula can be used as a consistency check in that usa_ofs + 197 * (usa_count * 2) has to be less than or equal to 510. 198 */ 199typedef struct { 200 NTFS_RECORD_TYPE magic; /* A four-byte magic identifying the record 201 type and/or status. */ 202 le16 usa_ofs; /* Offset to the Update Sequence Array (usa) 203 from the start of the ntfs record. */ 204 le16 usa_count; /* Number of le16 sized entries in the usa 205 including the Update Sequence Number (usn), 206 thus the number of fixups is the usa_count 207 minus 1. */ 208} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) NTFS_RECORD; 209 210/* 211 * System files mft record numbers. All these files are always marked as used 212 * in the bitmap attribute of the mft; presumably in order to avoid accidental 213 * allocation for random other mft records. Also, the sequence number for each 214 * of the system files is always equal to their mft record number and it is 215 * never modified. 216 */ 217typedef enum { 218 FILE_MFT = 0, /* Master file table (mft). Data attribute 219 contains the entries and bitmap attribute 220 records which ones are in use (bit==1). */ 221 FILE_MFTMirr = 1, /* Mft mirror: copy of first four mft records 222 in data attribute. If cluster size > 4kiB, 223 copy of first N mft records, with 224 N = cluster_size / mft_record_size. */ 225 FILE_LogFile = 2, /* Journalling log in data attribute. */ 226 FILE_Volume = 3, /* Volume name attribute and volume information 227 attribute (flags and ntfs version). Windows 228 refers to this file as volume DASD (Direct 229 Access Storage Device). */ 230 FILE_AttrDef = 4, /* Array of attribute definitions in data 231 attribute. */ 232 FILE_root = 5, /* Root directory. */ 233 FILE_Bitmap = 6, /* Allocation bitmap of all clusters (lcns) in 234 data attribute. */ 235 FILE_Boot = 7, /* Boot sector (always at cluster 0) in data 236 attribute. */ 237 FILE_BadClus = 8, /* Contains all bad clusters in the non-resident 238 data attribute. */ 239 FILE_Secure = 9, /* Shared security descriptors in data attribute 240 and two indexes into the descriptors. 241 Appeared in Windows 2000. Before that, this 242 file was named $Quota but was unused. */ 243 FILE_UpCase = 10, /* Uppercase equivalents of all 65536 Unicode 244 characters in data attribute. */ 245 FILE_Extend = 11, /* Directory containing other system files (eg. 246 $ObjId, $Quota, $Reparse and $UsnJrnl). This 247 is new to NTFS3.0. */ 248 FILE_reserved12 = 12, /* Reserved for future use (records 12-15). */ 249 FILE_reserved13 = 13, 250 FILE_reserved14 = 14, 251 FILE_reserved15 = 15, 252 FILE_first_user = 16, /* First user file, used as test limit for 253 whether to allow opening a file or not. */ 254} NTFS_SYSTEM_FILES; 255 256/* 257 * These are the so far known MFT_RECORD_* flags (16-bit) which contain 258 * information about the mft record in which they are present. 259 */ 260enum { 261 MFT_RECORD_IN_USE = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0001), 262 MFT_RECORD_IS_DIRECTORY = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0002), 263} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 264 265typedef le16 MFT_RECORD_FLAGS; 266 267/* 268 * mft references (aka file references or file record segment references) are 269 * used whenever a structure needs to refer to a record in the mft. 270 * 271 * A reference consists of a 48-bit index into the mft and a 16-bit sequence 272 * number used to detect stale references. 273 * 274 * For error reporting purposes we treat the 48-bit index as a signed quantity. 275 * 276 * The sequence number is a circular counter (skipping 0) describing how many 277 * times the referenced mft record has been (re)used. This has to match the 278 * sequence number of the mft record being referenced, otherwise the reference 279 * is considered stale and removed (FIXME: only ntfsck or the driver itself?). 280 * 281 * If the sequence number is zero it is assumed that no sequence number 282 * consistency checking should be performed. 283 * 284 * FIXME: Since inodes are 32-bit as of now, the driver needs to always check 285 * for high_part being 0 and if not either BUG(), cause a panic() or handle 286 * the situation in some other way. This shouldn't be a problem as a volume has 287 * to become HUGE in order to need more than 32-bits worth of mft records. 288 * Assuming the standard mft record size of 1kb only the records (never mind 289 * the non-resident attributes, etc.) would require 4Tb of space on their own 290 * for the first 32 bits worth of records. This is only if some strange person 291 * doesn't decide to foul play and make the mft sparse which would be a really 292 * horrible thing to do as it would trash our current driver implementation. )-: 293 * Do I hear screams "we want 64-bit inodes!" ?!? (-; 294 * 295 * FIXME: The mft zone is defined as the first 12% of the volume. This space is 296 * reserved so that the mft can grow contiguously and hence doesn't become 297 * fragmented. Volume free space includes the empty part of the mft zone and 298 * when the volume's free 88% are used up, the mft zone is shrunk by a factor 299 * of 2, thus making more space available for more files/data. This process is 300 * repeated everytime there is no more free space except for the mft zone until 301 * there really is no more free space. 302 */ 303 304/* 305 * Typedef the MFT_REF as a 64-bit value for easier handling. 306 * Also define two unpacking macros to get to the reference (MREF) and 307 * sequence number (MSEQNO) respectively. 308 * The _LE versions are to be applied on little endian MFT_REFs. 309 * Note: The _LE versions will return a CPU endian formatted value! 310 */ 311typedef enum { 312 MFT_REF_MASK_CPU = 0x0000ffffffffffffULL, 313 MFT_REF_MASK_LE = const_cpu_to_le64(0x0000ffffffffffffULL), 314} MFT_REF_CONSTS; 315 316typedef u64 MFT_REF; 317typedef le64 leMFT_REF; 318 319#define MK_MREF(m, s) ((MFT_REF)(((MFT_REF)(s) << 48) | \ 320 ((MFT_REF)(m) & MFT_REF_MASK_CPU))) 321#define MK_LE_MREF(m, s) cpu_to_le64(MK_MREF(m, s)) 322 323#define MREF(x) ((unsigned long)((x) & MFT_REF_MASK_CPU)) 324#define MSEQNO(x) ((u16)(((x) >> 48) & 0xffff)) 325#define MREF_LE(x) ((unsigned long)(le64_to_cpu(x) & MFT_REF_MASK_CPU)) 326#define MSEQNO_LE(x) ((u16)((le64_to_cpu(x) >> 48) & 0xffff)) 327 328#define IS_ERR_MREF(x) (((x) & 0x0000800000000000ULL) ? 1 : 0) 329#define ERR_MREF(x) ((u64)((s64)(x))) 330#define MREF_ERR(x) ((int)((s64)(x))) 331 332/* 333 * The mft record header present at the beginning of every record in the mft. 334 * This is followed by a sequence of variable length attribute records which 335 * is terminated by an attribute of type AT_END which is a truncated attribute 336 * in that it only consists of the attribute type code AT_END and none of the 337 * other members of the attribute structure are present. 338 */ 339typedef struct { 340/*Ofs*/ 341/* 0 NTFS_RECORD; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like unnamed structs. */ 342 NTFS_RECORD_TYPE magic; /* Usually the magic is "FILE". */ 343 le16 usa_ofs; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition above. */ 344 le16 usa_count; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition above. */ 345 346/* 8*/ le64 lsn; /* $LogFile sequence number for this record. 347 Changed every time the record is modified. */ 348/* 16*/ le16 sequence_number; /* Number of times this mft record has been 349 reused. (See description for MFT_REF 350 above.) NOTE: The increment (skipping zero) 351 is done when the file is deleted. NOTE: If 352 this is zero it is left zero. */ 353/* 18*/ le16 link_count; /* Number of hard links, i.e. the number of 354 directory entries referencing this record. 355 NOTE: Only used in mft base records. 356 NOTE: When deleting a directory entry we 357 check the link_count and if it is 1 we 358 delete the file. Otherwise we delete the 359 FILE_NAME_ATTR being referenced by the 360 directory entry from the mft record and 361 decrement the link_count. 362 FIXME: Careful with Win32 + DOS names! */ 363/* 20*/ le16 attrs_offset; /* Byte offset to the first attribute in this 364 mft record from the start of the mft record. 365 NOTE: Must be aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 366/* 22*/ MFT_RECORD_FLAGS flags; /* Bit array of MFT_RECORD_FLAGS. When a file 367 is deleted, the MFT_RECORD_IN_USE flag is 368 set to zero. */ 369/* 24*/ le32 bytes_in_use; /* Number of bytes used in this mft record. 370 NOTE: Must be aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 371/* 28*/ le32 bytes_allocated; /* Number of bytes allocated for this mft 372 record. This should be equal to the mft 373 record size. */ 374/* 32*/ leMFT_REF base_mft_record;/* This is zero for base mft records. 375 When it is not zero it is a mft reference 376 pointing to the base mft record to which 377 this record belongs (this is then used to 378 locate the attribute list attribute present 379 in the base record which describes this 380 extension record and hence might need 381 modification when the extension record 382 itself is modified, also locating the 383 attribute list also means finding the other 384 potential extents, belonging to the non-base 385 mft record). */ 386/* 40*/ le16 next_attr_instance;/* The instance number that will be assigned to 387 the next attribute added to this mft record. 388 NOTE: Incremented each time after it is used. 389 NOTE: Every time the mft record is reused 390 this number is set to zero. NOTE: The first 391 instance number is always 0. */ 392/* The below fields are specific to NTFS 3.1+ (Windows XP and above): */ 393/* 42*/ le16 reserved; /* Reserved/alignment. */ 394/* 44*/ le32 mft_record_number; /* Number of this mft record. */ 395/* sizeof() = 48 bytes */ 396/* 397 * When (re)using the mft record, we place the update sequence array at this 398 * offset, i.e. before we start with the attributes. This also makes sense, 399 * otherwise we could run into problems with the update sequence array 400 * containing in itself the last two bytes of a sector which would mean that 401 * multi sector transfer protection wouldn't work. As you can't protect data 402 * by overwriting it since you then can't get it back... 403 * When reading we obviously use the data from the ntfs record header. 404 */ 405} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) MFT_RECORD; 406 407/* This is the version without the NTFS 3.1+ specific fields. */ 408typedef struct { 409/*Ofs*/ 410/* 0 NTFS_RECORD; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like unnamed structs. */ 411 NTFS_RECORD_TYPE magic; /* Usually the magic is "FILE". */ 412 le16 usa_ofs; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition above. */ 413 le16 usa_count; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition above. */ 414 415/* 8*/ le64 lsn; /* $LogFile sequence number for this record. 416 Changed every time the record is modified. */ 417/* 16*/ le16 sequence_number; /* Number of times this mft record has been 418 reused. (See description for MFT_REF 419 above.) NOTE: The increment (skipping zero) 420 is done when the file is deleted. NOTE: If 421 this is zero it is left zero. */ 422/* 18*/ le16 link_count; /* Number of hard links, i.e. the number of 423 directory entries referencing this record. 424 NOTE: Only used in mft base records. 425 NOTE: When deleting a directory entry we 426 check the link_count and if it is 1 we 427 delete the file. Otherwise we delete the 428 FILE_NAME_ATTR being referenced by the 429 directory entry from the mft record and 430 decrement the link_count. 431 FIXME: Careful with Win32 + DOS names! */ 432/* 20*/ le16 attrs_offset; /* Byte offset to the first attribute in this 433 mft record from the start of the mft record. 434 NOTE: Must be aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 435/* 22*/ MFT_RECORD_FLAGS flags; /* Bit array of MFT_RECORD_FLAGS. When a file 436 is deleted, the MFT_RECORD_IN_USE flag is 437 set to zero. */ 438/* 24*/ le32 bytes_in_use; /* Number of bytes used in this mft record. 439 NOTE: Must be aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 440/* 28*/ le32 bytes_allocated; /* Number of bytes allocated for this mft 441 record. This should be equal to the mft 442 record size. */ 443/* 32*/ leMFT_REF base_mft_record;/* This is zero for base mft records. 444 When it is not zero it is a mft reference 445 pointing to the base mft record to which 446 this record belongs (this is then used to 447 locate the attribute list attribute present 448 in the base record which describes this 449 extension record and hence might need 450 modification when the extension record 451 itself is modified, also locating the 452 attribute list also means finding the other 453 potential extents, belonging to the non-base 454 mft record). */ 455/* 40*/ le16 next_attr_instance;/* The instance number that will be assigned to 456 the next attribute added to this mft record. 457 NOTE: Incremented each time after it is used. 458 NOTE: Every time the mft record is reused 459 this number is set to zero. NOTE: The first 460 instance number is always 0. */ 461/* sizeof() = 42 bytes */ 462/* 463 * When (re)using the mft record, we place the update sequence array at this 464 * offset, i.e. before we start with the attributes. This also makes sense, 465 * otherwise we could run into problems with the update sequence array 466 * containing in itself the last two bytes of a sector which would mean that 467 * multi sector transfer protection wouldn't work. As you can't protect data 468 * by overwriting it since you then can't get it back... 469 * When reading we obviously use the data from the ntfs record header. 470 */ 471} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) MFT_RECORD_OLD; 472 473/* 474 * System defined attributes (32-bit). Each attribute type has a corresponding 475 * attribute name (Unicode string of maximum 64 character length) as described 476 * by the attribute definitions present in the data attribute of the $AttrDef 477 * system file. On NTFS 3.0 volumes the names are just as the types are named 478 * in the below defines exchanging AT_ for the dollar sign ($). If that is not 479 * a revealing choice of symbol I do not know what is... (-; 480 */ 481enum { 482 AT_UNUSED = const_cpu_to_le32( 0), 483 AT_STANDARD_INFORMATION = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x10), 484 AT_ATTRIBUTE_LIST = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x20), 485 AT_FILE_NAME = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x30), 486 AT_OBJECT_ID = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x40), 487 AT_SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x50), 488 AT_VOLUME_NAME = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x60), 489 AT_VOLUME_INFORMATION = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x70), 490 AT_DATA = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x80), 491 AT_INDEX_ROOT = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x90), 492 AT_INDEX_ALLOCATION = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xa0), 493 AT_BITMAP = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xb0), 494 AT_REPARSE_POINT = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xc0), 495 AT_EA_INFORMATION = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xd0), 496 AT_EA = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xe0), 497 AT_PROPERTY_SET = const_cpu_to_le32( 0xf0), 498 AT_LOGGED_UTILITY_STREAM = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x100), 499 AT_FIRST_USER_DEFINED_ATTRIBUTE = const_cpu_to_le32( 0x1000), 500 AT_END = const_cpu_to_le32(0xffffffff) 501}; 502 503typedef le32 ATTR_TYPE; 504 505/* 506 * The collation rules for sorting views/indexes/etc (32-bit). 507 * 508 * COLLATION_BINARY - Collate by binary compare where the first byte is most 509 * significant. 510 * COLLATION_UNICODE_STRING - Collate Unicode strings by comparing their binary 511 * Unicode values, except that when a character can be uppercased, the 512 * upper case value collates before the lower case one. 513 * COLLATION_FILE_NAME - Collate file names as Unicode strings. The collation 514 * is done very much like COLLATION_UNICODE_STRING. In fact I have no idea 515 * what the difference is. Perhaps the difference is that file names 516 * would treat some special characters in an odd way (see 517 * unistr.c::ntfs_collate_names() and unistr.c::legal_ansi_char_array[] 518 * for what I mean but COLLATION_UNICODE_STRING would not give any special 519 * treatment to any characters at all, but this is speculation. 520 * COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONG - Sorting is done according to ascending le32 key 521 * values. E.g. used for $SII index in FILE_Secure, which sorts by 522 * security_id (le32). 523 * COLLATION_NTOFS_SID - Sorting is done according to ascending SID values. 524 * E.g. used for $O index in FILE_Extend/$Quota. 525 * COLLATION_NTOFS_SECURITY_HASH - Sorting is done first by ascending hash 526 * values and second by ascending security_id values. E.g. used for $SDH 527 * index in FILE_Secure. 528 * COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONGS - Sorting is done according to a sequence of ascending 529 * le32 key values. E.g. used for $O index in FILE_Extend/$ObjId, which 530 * sorts by object_id (16-byte), by splitting up the object_id in four 531 * le32 values and using them as individual keys. E.g. take the following 532 * two security_ids, stored as follows on disk: 533 * 1st: a1 61 65 b7 65 7b d4 11 9e 3d 00 e0 81 10 42 59 534 * 2nd: 38 14 37 d2 d2 f3 d4 11 a5 21 c8 6b 79 b1 97 45 535 * To compare them, they are split into four le32 values each, like so: 536 * 1st: 0xb76561a1 0x11d47b65 0xe0003d9e 0x59421081 537 * 2nd: 0xd2371438 0x11d4f3d2 0x6bc821a5 0x4597b179 538 * Now, it is apparent why the 2nd object_id collates after the 1st: the 539 * first le32 value of the 1st object_id is less than the first le32 of 540 * the 2nd object_id. If the first le32 values of both object_ids were 541 * equal then the second le32 values would be compared, etc. 542 */ 543enum { 544 COLLATION_BINARY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00), 545 COLLATION_FILE_NAME = const_cpu_to_le32(0x01), 546 COLLATION_UNICODE_STRING = const_cpu_to_le32(0x02), 547 COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONG = const_cpu_to_le32(0x10), 548 COLLATION_NTOFS_SID = const_cpu_to_le32(0x11), 549 COLLATION_NTOFS_SECURITY_HASH = const_cpu_to_le32(0x12), 550 COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONGS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x13), 551}; 552 553typedef le32 COLLATION_RULE; 554 555/* 556 * The flags (32-bit) describing attribute properties in the attribute 557 * definition structure. FIXME: This information is based on Regis's 558 * information and, according to him, it is not certain and probably 559 * incomplete. The INDEXABLE flag is fairly certainly correct as only the file 560 * name attribute has this flag set and this is the only attribute indexed in 561 * NT4. 562 */ 563enum { 564 ATTR_DEF_INDEXABLE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x02), /* Attribute can be 565 indexed. */ 566 ATTR_DEF_MULTIPLE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x04), /* Attribute type 567 can be present multiple times in the 568 mft records of an inode. */ 569 ATTR_DEF_NOT_ZERO = const_cpu_to_le32(0x08), /* Attribute value 570 must contain at least one non-zero 571 byte. */ 572 ATTR_DEF_INDEXED_UNIQUE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x10), /* Attribute must be 573 indexed and the attribute value must be 574 unique for the attribute type in all of 575 the mft records of an inode. */ 576 ATTR_DEF_NAMED_UNIQUE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x20), /* Attribute must be 577 named and the name must be unique for 578 the attribute type in all of the mft 579 records of an inode. */ 580 ATTR_DEF_RESIDENT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x40), /* Attribute must be 581 resident. */ 582 ATTR_DEF_ALWAYS_LOG = const_cpu_to_le32(0x80), /* Always log 583 modifications to this attribute, 584 regardless of whether it is resident or 585 non-resident. Without this, only log 586 modifications if the attribute is 587 resident. */ 588}; 589 590typedef le32 ATTR_DEF_FLAGS; 591 592/* 593 * The data attribute of FILE_AttrDef contains a sequence of attribute 594 * definitions for the NTFS volume. With this, it is supposed to be safe for an 595 * older NTFS driver to mount a volume containing a newer NTFS version without 596 * damaging it (that's the theory. In practice it's: not damaging it too much). 597 * Entries are sorted by attribute type. The flags describe whether the 598 * attribute can be resident/non-resident and possibly other things, but the 599 * actual bits are unknown. 600 */ 601typedef struct { 602/*hex ofs*/ 603/* 0*/ ntfschar name[0x40]; /* Unicode name of the attribute. Zero 604 terminated. */ 605/* 80*/ ATTR_TYPE type; /* Type of the attribute. */ 606/* 84*/ le32 display_rule; /* Default display rule. 607 FIXME: What does it mean? (AIA) */ 608/* 88*/ COLLATION_RULE collation_rule; /* Default collation rule. */ 609/* 8c*/ ATTR_DEF_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the attribute. */ 610/* 90*/ sle64 min_size; /* Optional minimum attribute size. */ 611/* 98*/ sle64 max_size; /* Maximum size of attribute. */ 612/* sizeof() = 0xa0 or 160 bytes */ 613} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ATTR_DEF; 614 615/* 616 * Attribute flags (16-bit). 617 */ 618enum { 619 ATTR_IS_COMPRESSED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0001), 620 ATTR_COMPRESSION_MASK = const_cpu_to_le16(0x00ff), /* Compression method 621 mask. Also, first 622 illegal value. */ 623 ATTR_IS_ENCRYPTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x4000), 624 ATTR_IS_SPARSE = const_cpu_to_le16(0x8000), 625} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 626 627typedef le16 ATTR_FLAGS; 628 629/* 630 * Attribute compression. 631 * 632 * Only the data attribute is ever compressed in the current ntfs driver in 633 * Windows. Further, compression is only applied when the data attribute is 634 * non-resident. Finally, to use compression, the maximum allowed cluster size 635 * on a volume is 4kib. 636 * 637 * The compression method is based on independently compressing blocks of X 638 * clusters, where X is determined from the compression_unit value found in the 639 * non-resident attribute record header (more precisely: X = 2^compression_unit 640 * clusters). On Windows NT/2k, X always is 16 clusters (compression_unit = 4). 641 * 642 * There are three different cases of how a compression block of X clusters 643 * can be stored: 644 * 645 * 1) The data in the block is all zero (a sparse block): 646 * This is stored as a sparse block in the runlist, i.e. the runlist 647 * entry has length = X and lcn = -1. The mapping pairs array actually 648 * uses a delta_lcn value length of 0, i.e. delta_lcn is not present at 649 * all, which is then interpreted by the driver as lcn = -1. 650 * NOTE: Even uncompressed files can be sparse on NTFS 3.0 volumes, then 651 * the same principles apply as above, except that the length is not 652 * restricted to being any particular value. 653 * 654 * 2) The data in the block is not compressed: 655 * This happens when compression doesn't reduce the size of the block 656 * in clusters. I.e. if compression has a small effect so that the 657 * compressed data still occupies X clusters, then the uncompressed data 658 * is stored in the block. 659 * This case is recognised by the fact that the runlist entry has 660 * length = X and lcn >= 0. The mapping pairs array stores this as 661 * normal with a run length of X and some specific delta_lcn, i.e. 662 * delta_lcn has to be present. 663 * 664 * 3) The data in the block is compressed: 665 * The common case. This case is recognised by the fact that the run 666 * list entry has length L < X and lcn >= 0. The mapping pairs array 667 * stores this as normal with a run length of X and some specific 668 * delta_lcn, i.e. delta_lcn has to be present. This runlist entry is 669 * immediately followed by a sparse entry with length = X - L and 670 * lcn = -1. The latter entry is to make up the vcn counting to the 671 * full compression block size X. 672 * 673 * In fact, life is more complicated because adjacent entries of the same type 674 * can be coalesced. This means that one has to keep track of the number of 675 * clusters handled and work on a basis of X clusters at a time being one 676 * block. An example: if length L > X this means that this particular runlist 677 * entry contains a block of length X and part of one or more blocks of length 678 * L - X. Another example: if length L < X, this does not necessarily mean that 679 * the block is compressed as it might be that the lcn changes inside the block 680 * and hence the following runlist entry describes the continuation of the 681 * potentially compressed block. The block would be compressed if the 682 * following runlist entry describes at least X - L sparse clusters, thus 683 * making up the compression block length as described in point 3 above. (Of 684 * course, there can be several runlist entries with small lengths so that the 685 * sparse entry does not follow the first data containing entry with 686 * length < X.) 687 * 688 * NOTE: At the end of the compressed attribute value, there most likely is not 689 * just the right amount of data to make up a compression block, thus this data 690 * is not even attempted to be compressed. It is just stored as is, unless 691 * the number of clusters it occupies is reduced when compressed in which case 692 * it is stored as a compressed compression block, complete with sparse 693 * clusters at the end. 694 */ 695 696/* 697 * Flags of resident attributes (8-bit). 698 */ 699enum { 700 RESIDENT_ATTR_IS_INDEXED = 0x01, /* Attribute is referenced in an index 701 (has implications for deleting and 702 modifying the attribute). */ 703} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 704 705typedef u8 RESIDENT_ATTR_FLAGS; 706 707/* 708 * Attribute record header. Always aligned to 8-byte boundary. 709 */ 710typedef struct { 711/*Ofs*/ 712/* 0*/ ATTR_TYPE type; /* The (32-bit) type of the attribute. */ 713/* 4*/ le32 length; /* Byte size of the resident part of the 714 attribute (aligned to 8-byte boundary). 715 Used to get to the next attribute. */ 716/* 8*/ u8 non_resident; /* If 0, attribute is resident. 717 If 1, attribute is non-resident. */ 718/* 9*/ u8 name_length; /* Unicode character size of name of attribute. 719 0 if unnamed. */ 720/* 10*/ le16 name_offset; /* If name_length != 0, the byte offset to the 721 beginning of the name from the attribute 722 record. Note that the name is stored as a 723 Unicode string. When creating, place offset 724 just at the end of the record header. Then, 725 follow with attribute value or mapping pairs 726 array, resident and non-resident attributes 727 respectively, aligning to an 8-byte 728 boundary. */ 729/* 12*/ ATTR_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the attribute. */ 730/* 14*/ le16 instance; /* The instance of this attribute record. This 731 number is unique within this mft record (see 732 MFT_RECORD/next_attribute_instance notes in 733 in mft.h for more details). */ 734/* 16*/ union { 735 /* Resident attributes. */ 736 struct { 737/* 16 */ le32 value_length;/* Byte size of attribute value. */ 738/* 20 */ le16 value_offset;/* Byte offset of the attribute 739 value from the start of the 740 attribute record. When creating, 741 align to 8-byte boundary if we 742 have a name present as this might 743 not have a length of a multiple 744 of 8-bytes. */ 745/* 22 */ RESIDENT_ATTR_FLAGS flags; /* See above. */ 746/* 23 */ s8 reserved; /* Reserved/alignment to 8-byte 747 boundary. */ 748 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) resident; 749 /* Non-resident attributes. */ 750 struct { 751/* 16*/ leVCN lowest_vcn;/* Lowest valid virtual cluster number 752 for this portion of the attribute value or 753 0 if this is the only extent (usually the 754 case). - Only when an attribute list is used 755 does lowest_vcn != 0 ever occur. */ 756/* 24*/ leVCN highest_vcn;/* Highest valid vcn of this extent of 757 the attribute value. - Usually there is only one 758 portion, so this usually equals the attribute 759 value size in clusters minus 1. Can be -1 for 760 zero length files. Can be 0 for "single extent" 761 attributes. */ 762/* 32*/ le16 mapping_pairs_offset; /* Byte offset from the 763 beginning of the structure to the mapping pairs 764 array which contains the mappings between the 765 vcns and the logical cluster numbers (lcns). 766 When creating, place this at the end of this 767 record header aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 768/* 34*/ u8 compression_unit; /* The compression unit expressed 769 as the log to the base 2 of the number of 770 clusters in a compression unit. 0 means not 771 compressed. (This effectively limits the 772 compression unit size to be a power of two 773 clusters.) WinNT4 only uses a value of 4. 774 Sparse files also have this set to 4. */ 775/* 35*/ u8 reserved[5]; /* Align to 8-byte boundary. */ 776/* The sizes below are only used when lowest_vcn is zero, as otherwise it would 777 be difficult to keep them up-to-date.*/ 778/* 40*/ sle64 allocated_size; /* Byte size of disk space 779 allocated to hold the attribute value. Always 780 is a multiple of the cluster size. When a file 781 is compressed, this field is a multiple of the 782 compression block size (2^compression_unit) and 783 it represents the logically allocated space 784 rather than the actual on disk usage. For this 785 use the compressed_size (see below). */ 786/* 48*/ sle64 data_size; /* Byte size of the attribute 787 value. Can be larger than allocated_size if 788 attribute value is compressed or sparse. */ 789/* 56*/ sle64 initialized_size; /* Byte size of initialized 790 portion of the attribute value. Usually equals 791 data_size. */ 792/* sizeof(uncompressed attr) = 64*/ 793/* 64*/ sle64 compressed_size; /* Byte size of the attribute 794 value after compression. Only present when 795 compressed or sparse. Always is a multiple of 796 the cluster size. Represents the actual amount 797 of disk space being used on the disk. */ 798/* sizeof(compressed attr) = 72*/ 799 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) non_resident; 800 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) data; 801} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ATTR_RECORD; 802 803typedef ATTR_RECORD ATTR_REC; 804 805/* 806 * File attribute flags (32-bit). 807 */ 808enum { 809 /* 810 * The following flags are only present in the STANDARD_INFORMATION 811 * attribute (in the field file_attributes). 812 */ 813 FILE_ATTR_READONLY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 814 FILE_ATTR_HIDDEN = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000002), 815 FILE_ATTR_SYSTEM = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000004), 816 /* Old DOS volid. Unused in NT. = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000008), */ 817 818 FILE_ATTR_DIRECTORY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000010), 819 /* Note, FILE_ATTR_DIRECTORY is not considered valid in NT. It is 820 reserved for the DOS SUBDIRECTORY flag. */ 821 FILE_ATTR_ARCHIVE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000020), 822 FILE_ATTR_DEVICE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000040), 823 FILE_ATTR_NORMAL = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000080), 824 825 FILE_ATTR_TEMPORARY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000100), 826 FILE_ATTR_SPARSE_FILE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000200), 827 FILE_ATTR_REPARSE_POINT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000400), 828 FILE_ATTR_COMPRESSED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000800), 829 830 FILE_ATTR_OFFLINE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00001000), 831 FILE_ATTR_NOT_CONTENT_INDEXED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00002000), 832 FILE_ATTR_ENCRYPTED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00004000), 833 834 FILE_ATTR_VALID_FLAGS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00007fb7), 835 /* Note, FILE_ATTR_VALID_FLAGS masks out the old DOS VolId and the 836 FILE_ATTR_DEVICE and preserves everything else. This mask is used 837 to obtain all flags that are valid for reading. */ 838 FILE_ATTR_VALID_SET_FLAGS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x000031a7), 839 /* Note, FILE_ATTR_VALID_SET_FLAGS masks out the old DOS VolId, the 840 F_A_DEVICE, F_A_DIRECTORY, F_A_SPARSE_FILE, F_A_REPARSE_POINT, 841 F_A_COMPRESSED, and F_A_ENCRYPTED and preserves the rest. This mask 842 is used to to obtain all flags that are valid for setting. */ 843 844 /* 845 * The following flags are only present in the FILE_NAME attribute (in 846 * the field file_attributes). 847 */ 848 FILE_ATTR_DUP_FILE_NAME_INDEX_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x10000000), 849 /* Note, this is a copy of the corresponding bit from the mft record, 850 telling us whether this is a directory or not, i.e. whether it has 851 an index root attribute or not. */ 852 FILE_ATTR_DUP_VIEW_INDEX_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x20000000), 853 /* Note, this is a copy of the corresponding bit from the mft record, 854 telling us whether this file has a view index present (eg. object id 855 index, quota index, one of the security indexes or the encrypting 856 filesystem related indexes). */ 857}; 858 859typedef le32 FILE_ATTR_FLAGS; 860 861/* 862 * NOTE on times in NTFS: All times are in MS standard time format, i.e. they 863 * are the number of 100-nanosecond intervals since 1st January 1601, 00:00:00 864 * universal coordinated time (UTC). (In Linux time starts 1st January 1970, 865 * 00:00:00 UTC and is stored as the number of 1-second intervals since then.) 866 */ 867 868/* 869 * Attribute: Standard information (0x10). 870 * 871 * NOTE: Always resident. 872 * NOTE: Present in all base file records on a volume. 873 * NOTE: There is conflicting information about the meaning of each of the time 874 * fields but the meaning as defined below has been verified to be 875 * correct by practical experimentation on Windows NT4 SP6a and is hence 876 * assumed to be the one and only correct interpretation. 877 */ 878typedef struct { 879/*Ofs*/ 880/* 0*/ sle64 creation_time; /* Time file was created. Updated when 881 a filename is changed(?). */ 882/* 8*/ sle64 last_data_change_time; /* Time the data attribute was last 883 modified. */ 884/* 16*/ sle64 last_mft_change_time; /* Time this mft record was last 885 modified. */ 886/* 24*/ sle64 last_access_time; /* Approximate time when the file was 887 last accessed (obviously this is not 888 updated on read-only volumes). In 889 Windows this is only updated when 890 accessed if some time delta has 891 passed since the last update. Also, 892 last access times updates can be 893 disabled altogether for speed. */ 894/* 32*/ FILE_ATTR_FLAGS file_attributes; /* Flags describing the file. */ 895/* 36*/ union { 896 /* NTFS 1.2 */ 897 struct { 898 /* 36*/ u8 reserved12[12]; /* Reserved/alignment to 8-byte 899 boundary. */ 900 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) v1; 901 /* sizeof() = 48 bytes */ 902 /* NTFS 3.x */ 903 struct { 904/* 905 * If a volume has been upgraded from a previous NTFS version, then these 906 * fields are present only if the file has been accessed since the upgrade. 907 * Recognize the difference by comparing the length of the resident attribute 908 * value. If it is 48, then the following fields are missing. If it is 72 then 909 * the fields are present. Maybe just check like this: 910 * if (resident.ValueLength < sizeof(STANDARD_INFORMATION)) { 911 * Assume NTFS 1.2- format. 912 * If (volume version is 3.x) 913 * Upgrade attribute to NTFS 3.x format. 914 * else 915 * Use NTFS 1.2- format for access. 916 * } else 917 * Use NTFS 3.x format for access. 918 * Only problem is that it might be legal to set the length of the value to 919 * arbitrarily large values thus spoiling this check. - But chkdsk probably 920 * views that as a corruption, assuming that it behaves like this for all 921 * attributes. 922 */ 923 /* 36*/ le32 maximum_versions; /* Maximum allowed versions for 924 file. Zero if version numbering is disabled. */ 925 /* 40*/ le32 version_number; /* This file's version (if any). 926 Set to zero if maximum_versions is zero. */ 927 /* 44*/ le32 class_id; /* Class id from bidirectional 928 class id index (?). */ 929 /* 48*/ le32 owner_id; /* Owner_id of the user owning 930 the file. Translate via $Q index in FILE_Extend 931 /$Quota to the quota control entry for the user 932 owning the file. Zero if quotas are disabled. */ 933 /* 52*/ le32 security_id; /* Security_id for the file. 934 Translate via $SII index and $SDS data stream 935 in FILE_Secure to the security descriptor. */ 936 /* 56*/ le64 quota_charged; /* Byte size of the charge to 937 the quota for all streams of the file. Note: Is 938 zero if quotas are disabled. */ 939 /* 64*/ leUSN usn; /* Last update sequence number 940 of the file. This is a direct index into the 941 transaction log file ($UsnJrnl). It is zero if 942 the usn journal is disabled or this file has 943 not been subject to logging yet. See usnjrnl.h 944 for details. */ 945 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) v3; 946 /* sizeof() = 72 bytes (NTFS 3.x) */ 947 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ver; 948} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) STANDARD_INFORMATION; 949 950/* 951 * Attribute: Attribute list (0x20). 952 * 953 * - Can be either resident or non-resident. 954 * - Value consists of a sequence of variable length, 8-byte aligned, 955 * ATTR_LIST_ENTRY records. 956 * - The list is not terminated by anything at all! The only way to know when 957 * the end is reached is to keep track of the current offset and compare it to 958 * the attribute value size. 959 * - The attribute list attribute contains one entry for each attribute of 960 * the file in which the list is located, except for the list attribute 961 * itself. The list is sorted: first by attribute type, second by attribute 962 * name (if present), third by instance number. The extents of one 963 * non-resident attribute (if present) immediately follow after the initial 964 * extent. They are ordered by lowest_vcn and have their instace set to zero. 965 * It is not allowed to have two attributes with all sorting keys equal. 966 * - Further restrictions: 967 * - If not resident, the vcn to lcn mapping array has to fit inside the 968 * base mft record. 969 * - The attribute list attribute value has a maximum size of 256kb. This 970 * is imposed by the Windows cache manager. 971 * - Attribute lists are only used when the attributes of mft record do not 972 * fit inside the mft record despite all attributes (that can be made 973 * non-resident) having been made non-resident. This can happen e.g. when: 974 * - File has a large number of hard links (lots of file name 975 * attributes present). 976 * - The mapping pairs array of some non-resident attribute becomes so 977 * large due to fragmentation that it overflows the mft record. 978 * - The security descriptor is very complex (not applicable to 979 * NTFS 3.0 volumes). 980 * - There are many named streams. 981 */ 982typedef struct { 983/*Ofs*/ 984/* 0*/ ATTR_TYPE type; /* Type of referenced attribute. */ 985/* 4*/ le16 length; /* Byte size of this entry (8-byte aligned). */ 986/* 6*/ u8 name_length; /* Size in Unicode chars of the name of the 987 attribute or 0 if unnamed. */ 988/* 7*/ u8 name_offset; /* Byte offset to beginning of attribute name 989 (always set this to where the name would 990 start even if unnamed). */ 991/* 8*/ leVCN lowest_vcn; /* Lowest virtual cluster number of this portion 992 of the attribute value. This is usually 0. It 993 is non-zero for the case where one attribute 994 does not fit into one mft record and thus 995 several mft records are allocated to hold 996 this attribute. In the latter case, each mft 997 record holds one extent of the attribute and 998 there is one attribute list entry for each 999 extent. NOTE: This is DEFINITELY a signed 1000 value! The windows driver uses cmp, followed 1001 by jg when comparing this, thus it treats it 1002 as signed. */ 1003/* 16*/ leMFT_REF mft_reference;/* The reference of the mft record holding 1004 the ATTR_RECORD for this portion of the 1005 attribute value. */ 1006/* 24*/ le16 instance; /* If lowest_vcn = 0, the instance of the 1007 attribute being referenced; otherwise 0. */ 1008/* 26*/ ntfschar name[0]; /* Use when creating only. When reading use 1009 name_offset to determine the location of the 1010 name. */ 1011/* sizeof() = 26 + (attribute_name_length * 2) bytes */ 1012} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ATTR_LIST_ENTRY; 1013 1014/* 1015 * The maximum allowed length for a file name. 1016 */ 1017#define MAXIMUM_FILE_NAME_LENGTH 255 1018 1019/* 1020 * Possible namespaces for filenames in ntfs (8-bit). 1021 */ 1022enum { 1023 FILE_NAME_POSIX = 0x00, 1024 /* This is the largest namespace. It is case sensitive and allows all 1025 Unicode characters except for: '\0' and '/'. Beware that in 1026 WinNT/2k files which eg have the same name except for their case 1027 will not be distinguished by the standard utilities and thus a "del 1028 filename" will delete both "filename" and "fileName" without 1029 warning. */ 1030 FILE_NAME_WIN32 = 0x01, 1031 /* The standard WinNT/2k NTFS long filenames. Case insensitive. All 1032 Unicode chars except: '\0', '"', '*', '/', ':', '<', '>', '?', '\', 1033 and '|'. Further, names cannot end with a '.' or a space. */ 1034 FILE_NAME_DOS = 0x02, 1035 /* The standard DOS filenames (8.3 format). Uppercase only. All 8-bit 1036 characters greater space, except: '"', '*', '+', ',', '/', ':', ';', 1037 '<', '=', '>', '?', and '\'. */ 1038 FILE_NAME_WIN32_AND_DOS = 0x03, 1039 /* 3 means that both the Win32 and the DOS filenames are identical and 1040 hence have been saved in this single filename record. */ 1041} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1042 1043typedef u8 FILE_NAME_TYPE_FLAGS; 1044 1045/* 1046 * Attribute: Filename (0x30). 1047 * 1048 * NOTE: Always resident. 1049 * NOTE: All fields, except the parent_directory, are only updated when the 1050 * filename is changed. Until then, they just become out of sync with 1051 * reality and the more up to date values are present in the standard 1052 * information attribute. 1053 * NOTE: There is conflicting information about the meaning of each of the time 1054 * fields but the meaning as defined below has been verified to be 1055 * correct by practical experimentation on Windows NT4 SP6a and is hence 1056 * assumed to be the one and only correct interpretation. 1057 */ 1058typedef struct { 1059/*hex ofs*/ 1060/* 0*/ leMFT_REF parent_directory; /* Directory this filename is 1061 referenced from. */ 1062/* 8*/ sle64 creation_time; /* Time file was created. */ 1063/* 10*/ sle64 last_data_change_time; /* Time the data attribute was last 1064 modified. */ 1065/* 18*/ sle64 last_mft_change_time; /* Time this mft record was last 1066 modified. */ 1067/* 20*/ sle64 last_access_time; /* Time this mft record was last 1068 accessed. */ 1069/* 28*/ sle64 allocated_size; /* Byte size of allocated space for the 1070 data attribute. NOTE: Is a multiple 1071 of the cluster size. */ 1072/* 30*/ sle64 data_size; /* Byte size of actual data in data 1073 attribute. */ 1074/* 38*/ FILE_ATTR_FLAGS file_attributes; /* Flags describing the file. */ 1075/* 3c*/ union { 1076 /* 3c*/ struct { 1077 /* 3c*/ le16 packed_ea_size; /* Size of the buffer needed to 1078 pack the extended attributes 1079 (EAs), if such are present.*/ 1080 /* 3e*/ le16 reserved; /* Reserved for alignment. */ 1081 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ea; 1082 /* 3c*/ struct { 1083 /* 3c*/ le32 reparse_point_tag; /* Type of reparse point, 1084 present only in reparse 1085 points and only if there are 1086 no EAs. */ 1087 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) rp; 1088 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) type; 1089/* 40*/ u8 file_name_length; /* Length of file name in 1090 (Unicode) characters. */ 1091/* 41*/ FILE_NAME_TYPE_FLAGS file_name_type; /* Namespace of the file name.*/ 1092/* 42*/ ntfschar file_name[0]; /* File name in Unicode. */ 1093} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) FILE_NAME_ATTR; 1094 1095/* 1096 * GUID structures store globally unique identifiers (GUID). A GUID is a 1097 * 128-bit value consisting of one group of eight hexadecimal digits, followed 1098 * by three groups of four hexadecimal digits each, followed by one group of 1099 * twelve hexadecimal digits. GUIDs are Microsoft's implementation of the 1100 * distributed computing environment (DCE) universally unique identifier (UUID). 1101 * Example of a GUID: 1102 * 1F010768-5A73-BC91-0010A52216A7 1103 */ 1104typedef struct { 1105 le32 data1; /* The first eight hexadecimal digits of the GUID. */ 1106 le16 data2; /* The first group of four hexadecimal digits. */ 1107 le16 data3; /* The second group of four hexadecimal digits. */ 1108 u8 data4[8]; /* The first two bytes are the third group of four 1109 hexadecimal digits. The remaining six bytes are the 1110 final 12 hexadecimal digits. */ 1111} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) GUID; 1112 1113/* 1114 * FILE_Extend/$ObjId contains an index named $O. This index contains all 1115 * object_ids present on the volume as the index keys and the corresponding 1116 * mft_record numbers as the index entry data parts. The data part (defined 1117 * below) also contains three other object_ids: 1118 * birth_volume_id - object_id of FILE_Volume on which the file was first 1119 * created. Optional (i.e. can be zero). 1120 * birth_object_id - object_id of file when it was first created. Usually 1121 * equals the object_id. Optional (i.e. can be zero). 1122 * domain_id - Reserved (always zero). 1123 */ 1124typedef struct { 1125 leMFT_REF mft_reference;/* Mft record containing the object_id in 1126 the index entry key. */ 1127 union { 1128 struct { 1129 GUID birth_volume_id; 1130 GUID birth_object_id; 1131 GUID domain_id; 1132 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) origin; 1133 u8 extended_info[48]; 1134 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) opt; 1135} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) OBJ_ID_INDEX_DATA; 1136 1137/* 1138 * Attribute: Object id (NTFS 3.0+) (0x40). 1139 * 1140 * NOTE: Always resident. 1141 */ 1142typedef struct { 1143 GUID object_id; /* Unique id assigned to the 1144 file.*/ 1145 /* The following fields are optional. The attribute value size is 16 1146 bytes, i.e. sizeof(GUID), if these are not present at all. Note, 1147 the entries can be present but one or more (or all) can be zero 1148 meaning that that particular value(s) is(are) not defined. */ 1149 union { 1150 struct { 1151 GUID birth_volume_id; /* Unique id of volume on which 1152 the file was first created.*/ 1153 GUID birth_object_id; /* Unique id of file when it was 1154 first created. */ 1155 GUID domain_id; /* Reserved, zero. */ 1156 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) origin; 1157 u8 extended_info[48]; 1158 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) opt; 1159} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) OBJECT_ID_ATTR; 1160 1161/* 1162 * The pre-defined IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITIES used as SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY in 1163 * the SID structure (see below). 1164 */ 1165//typedef enum { /* SID string prefix. */ 1166// SECURITY_NULL_SID_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0}, /* S-1-0 */ 1167// SECURITY_WORLD_SID_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1}, /* S-1-1 */ 1168// SECURITY_LOCAL_SID_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 2}, /* S-1-2 */ 1169// SECURITY_CREATOR_SID_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 3}, /* S-1-3 */ 1170// SECURITY_NON_UNIQUE_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 4}, /* S-1-4 */ 1171// SECURITY_NT_SID_AUTHORITY = {0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 5}, /* S-1-5 */ 1172//} IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITIES; 1173 1174/* 1175 * These relative identifiers (RIDs) are used with the above identifier 1176 * authorities to make up universal well-known SIDs. 1177 * 1178 * Note: The relative identifier (RID) refers to the portion of a SID, which 1179 * identifies a user or group in relation to the authority that issued the SID. 1180 * For example, the universal well-known SID Creator Owner ID (S-1-3-0) is 1181 * made up of the identifier authority SECURITY_CREATOR_SID_AUTHORITY (3) and 1182 * the relative identifier SECURITY_CREATOR_OWNER_RID (0). 1183 */ 1184typedef enum { /* Identifier authority. */ 1185 SECURITY_NULL_RID = 0, /* S-1-0 */ 1186 SECURITY_WORLD_RID = 0, /* S-1-1 */ 1187 SECURITY_LOCAL_RID = 0, /* S-1-2 */ 1188 1189 SECURITY_CREATOR_OWNER_RID = 0, /* S-1-3 */ 1190 SECURITY_CREATOR_GROUP_RID = 1, /* S-1-3 */ 1191 1192 SECURITY_CREATOR_OWNER_SERVER_RID = 2, /* S-1-3 */ 1193 SECURITY_CREATOR_GROUP_SERVER_RID = 3, /* S-1-3 */ 1194 1195 SECURITY_DIALUP_RID = 1, 1196 SECURITY_NETWORK_RID = 2, 1197 SECURITY_BATCH_RID = 3, 1198 SECURITY_INTERACTIVE_RID = 4, 1199 SECURITY_SERVICE_RID = 6, 1200 SECURITY_ANONYMOUS_LOGON_RID = 7, 1201 SECURITY_PROXY_RID = 8, 1202 SECURITY_ENTERPRISE_CONTROLLERS_RID=9, 1203 SECURITY_SERVER_LOGON_RID = 9, 1204 SECURITY_PRINCIPAL_SELF_RID = 0xa, 1205 SECURITY_AUTHENTICATED_USER_RID = 0xb, 1206 SECURITY_RESTRICTED_CODE_RID = 0xc, 1207 SECURITY_TERMINAL_SERVER_RID = 0xd, 1208 1209 SECURITY_LOGON_IDS_RID = 5, 1210 SECURITY_LOGON_IDS_RID_COUNT = 3, 1211 1212 SECURITY_LOCAL_SYSTEM_RID = 0x12, 1213 1214 SECURITY_NT_NON_UNIQUE = 0x15, 1215 1216 SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID = 0x20, 1217 1218 /* 1219 * Well-known domain relative sub-authority values (RIDs). 1220 */ 1221 1222 /* Users. */ 1223 DOMAIN_USER_RID_ADMIN = 0x1f4, 1224 DOMAIN_USER_RID_GUEST = 0x1f5, 1225 DOMAIN_USER_RID_KRBTGT = 0x1f6, 1226 1227 /* Groups. */ 1228 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_ADMINS = 0x200, 1229 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_USERS = 0x201, 1230 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_GUESTS = 0x202, 1231 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_COMPUTERS = 0x203, 1232 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_CONTROLLERS = 0x204, 1233 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_CERT_ADMINS = 0x205, 1234 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_SCHEMA_ADMINS = 0x206, 1235 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_ENTERPRISE_ADMINS= 0x207, 1236 DOMAIN_GROUP_RID_POLICY_ADMINS = 0x208, 1237 1238 /* Aliases. */ 1239 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS = 0x220, 1240 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_USERS = 0x221, 1241 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_GUESTS = 0x222, 1242 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_POWER_USERS = 0x223, 1243 1244 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ACCOUNT_OPS = 0x224, 1245 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_SYSTEM_OPS = 0x225, 1246 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_PRINT_OPS = 0x226, 1247 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_BACKUP_OPS = 0x227, 1248 1249 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_REPLICATOR = 0x228, 1250 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_RAS_SERVERS = 0x229, 1251 DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_PREW2KCOMPACCESS = 0x22a, 1252} RELATIVE_IDENTIFIERS; 1253 1254/* 1255 * The universal well-known SIDs: 1256 * 1257 * NULL_SID S-1-0-0 1258 * WORLD_SID S-1-1-0 1259 * LOCAL_SID S-1-2-0 1260 * CREATOR_OWNER_SID S-1-3-0 1261 * CREATOR_GROUP_SID S-1-3-1 1262 * CREATOR_OWNER_SERVER_SID S-1-3-2 1263 * CREATOR_GROUP_SERVER_SID S-1-3-3 1264 * 1265 * (Non-unique IDs) S-1-4 1266 * 1267 * NT well-known SIDs: 1268 * 1269 * NT_AUTHORITY_SID S-1-5 1270 * DIALUP_SID S-1-5-1 1271 * 1272 * NETWORD_SID S-1-5-2 1273 * BATCH_SID S-1-5-3 1274 * INTERACTIVE_SID S-1-5-4 1275 * SERVICE_SID S-1-5-6 1276 * ANONYMOUS_LOGON_SID S-1-5-7 (aka null logon session) 1277 * PROXY_SID S-1-5-8 1278 * SERVER_LOGON_SID S-1-5-9 (aka domain controller account) 1279 * SELF_SID S-1-5-10 (self RID) 1280 * AUTHENTICATED_USER_SID S-1-5-11 1281 * RESTRICTED_CODE_SID S-1-5-12 (running restricted code) 1282 * TERMINAL_SERVER_SID S-1-5-13 (running on terminal server) 1283 * 1284 * (Logon IDs) S-1-5-5-X-Y 1285 * 1286 * (NT non-unique IDs) S-1-5-0x15-... 1287 * 1288 * (Built-in domain) S-1-5-0x20 1289 */ 1290 1291/* 1292 * The SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY is a 48-bit value used in the SID structure. 1293 * 1294 * NOTE: This is stored as a big endian number, hence the high_part comes 1295 * before the low_part. 1296 */ 1297typedef union { 1298 struct { 1299 u16 high_part; /* High 16-bits. */ 1300 u32 low_part; /* Low 32-bits. */ 1301 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) parts; 1302 u8 value[6]; /* Value as individual bytes. */ 1303} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY; 1304 1305/* 1306 * The SID structure is a variable-length structure used to uniquely identify 1307 * users or groups. SID stands for security identifier. 1308 * 1309 * The standard textual representation of the SID is of the form: 1310 * S-R-I-S-S... 1311 * Where: 1312 * - The first "S" is the literal character 'S' identifying the following 1313 * digits as a SID. 1314 * - R is the revision level of the SID expressed as a sequence of digits 1315 * either in decimal or hexadecimal (if the later, prefixed by "0x"). 1316 * - I is the 48-bit identifier_authority, expressed as digits as R above. 1317 * - S... is one or more sub_authority values, expressed as digits as above. 1318 * 1319 * Example SID; the domain-relative SID of the local Administrators group on 1320 * Windows NT/2k: 1321 * S-1-5-32-544 1322 * This translates to a SID with: 1323 * revision = 1, 1324 * sub_authority_count = 2, 1325 * identifier_authority = {0,0,0,0,0,5}, // SECURITY_NT_AUTHORITY 1326 * sub_authority[0] = 32, // SECURITY_BUILTIN_DOMAIN_RID 1327 * sub_authority[1] = 544 // DOMAIN_ALIAS_RID_ADMINS 1328 */ 1329typedef struct { 1330 u8 revision; 1331 u8 sub_authority_count; 1332 SID_IDENTIFIER_AUTHORITY identifier_authority; 1333 le32 sub_authority[1]; /* At least one sub_authority. */ 1334} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SID; 1335 1336/* 1337 * Current constants for SIDs. 1338 */ 1339typedef enum { 1340 SID_REVISION = 1, /* Current revision level. */ 1341 SID_MAX_SUB_AUTHORITIES = 15, /* Maximum number of those. */ 1342 SID_RECOMMENDED_SUB_AUTHORITIES = 1, /* Will change to around 6 in 1343 a future revision. */ 1344} SID_CONSTANTS; 1345 1346/* 1347 * The predefined ACE types (8-bit, see below). 1348 */ 1349enum { 1350 ACCESS_MIN_MS_ACE_TYPE = 0, 1351 ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE_TYPE = 0, 1352 ACCESS_DENIED_ACE_TYPE = 1, 1353 SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE_TYPE = 2, 1354 SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE_TYPE = 3, /* Not implemented as of Win2k. */ 1355 ACCESS_MAX_MS_V2_ACE_TYPE = 3, 1356 1357 ACCESS_ALLOWED_COMPOUND_ACE_TYPE= 4, 1358 ACCESS_MAX_MS_V3_ACE_TYPE = 4, 1359 1360 /* The following are Win2k only. */ 1361 ACCESS_MIN_MS_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 5, 1362 ACCESS_ALLOWED_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 5, 1363 ACCESS_DENIED_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 6, 1364 SYSTEM_AUDIT_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 7, 1365 SYSTEM_ALARM_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 8, 1366 ACCESS_MAX_MS_OBJECT_ACE_TYPE = 8, 1367 1368 ACCESS_MAX_MS_V4_ACE_TYPE = 8, 1369 1370 /* This one is for WinNT/2k. */ 1371 ACCESS_MAX_MS_ACE_TYPE = 8, 1372} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1373 1374typedef u8 ACE_TYPES; 1375 1376/* 1377 * The ACE flags (8-bit) for audit and inheritance (see below). 1378 * 1379 * SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG is only used with system audit and alarm ACE 1380 * types to indicate that a message is generated (in Windows!) for successful 1381 * accesses. 1382 * 1383 * FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG is only used with system audit and alarm ACE types 1384 * to indicate that a message is generated (in Windows!) for failed accesses. 1385 */ 1386enum { 1387 /* The inheritance flags. */ 1388 OBJECT_INHERIT_ACE = 0x01, 1389 CONTAINER_INHERIT_ACE = 0x02, 1390 NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE = 0x04, 1391 INHERIT_ONLY_ACE = 0x08, 1392 INHERITED_ACE = 0x10, /* Win2k only. */ 1393 VALID_INHERIT_FLAGS = 0x1f, 1394 1395 /* The audit flags. */ 1396 SUCCESSFUL_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x40, 1397 FAILED_ACCESS_ACE_FLAG = 0x80, 1398} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1399 1400typedef u8 ACE_FLAGS; 1401 1402/* 1403 * An ACE is an access-control entry in an access-control list (ACL). 1404 * An ACE defines access to an object for a specific user or group or defines 1405 * the types of access that generate system-administration messages or alarms 1406 * for a specific user or group. The user or group is identified by a security 1407 * identifier (SID). 1408 * 1409 * Each ACE starts with an ACE_HEADER structure (aligned on 4-byte boundary), 1410 * which specifies the type and size of the ACE. The format of the subsequent 1411 * data depends on the ACE type. 1412 */ 1413typedef struct { 1414/*Ofs*/ 1415/* 0*/ ACE_TYPES type; /* Type of the ACE. */ 1416/* 1*/ ACE_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the ACE. */ 1417/* 2*/ le16 size; /* Size in bytes of the ACE. */ 1418} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ACE_HEADER; 1419 1420/* 1421 * The access mask (32-bit). Defines the access rights. 1422 * 1423 * The specific rights (bits 0 to 15). These depend on the type of the object 1424 * being secured by the ACE. 1425 */ 1426enum { 1427 /* Specific rights for files and directories are as follows: */ 1428 1429 /* Right to read data from the file. (FILE) */ 1430 FILE_READ_DATA = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 1431 /* Right to list contents of a directory. (DIRECTORY) */ 1432 FILE_LIST_DIRECTORY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 1433 1434 /* Right to write data to the file. (FILE) */ 1435 FILE_WRITE_DATA = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000002), 1436 /* Right to create a file in the directory. (DIRECTORY) */ 1437 FILE_ADD_FILE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000002), 1438 1439 /* Right to append data to the file. (FILE) */ 1440 FILE_APPEND_DATA = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000004), 1441 /* Right to create a subdirectory. (DIRECTORY) */ 1442 FILE_ADD_SUBDIRECTORY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000004), 1443 1444 /* Right to read extended attributes. (FILE/DIRECTORY) */ 1445 FILE_READ_EA = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000008), 1446 1447 /* Right to write extended attributes. (FILE/DIRECTORY) */ 1448 FILE_WRITE_EA = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000010), 1449 1450 /* Right to execute a file. (FILE) */ 1451 FILE_EXECUTE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000020), 1452 /* Right to traverse the directory. (DIRECTORY) */ 1453 FILE_TRAVERSE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000020), 1454 1455 /* 1456 * Right to delete a directory and all the files it contains (its 1457 * children), even if the files are read-only. (DIRECTORY) 1458 */ 1459 FILE_DELETE_CHILD = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000040), 1460 1461 /* Right to read file attributes. (FILE/DIRECTORY) */ 1462 FILE_READ_ATTRIBUTES = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000080), 1463 1464 /* Right to change file attributes. (FILE/DIRECTORY) */ 1465 FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000100), 1466 1467 /* 1468 * The standard rights (bits 16 to 23). These are independent of the 1469 * type of object being secured. 1470 */ 1471 1472 /* Right to delete the object. */ 1473 DELETE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00010000), 1474 1475 /* 1476 * Right to read the information in the object's security descriptor, 1477 * not including the information in the SACL, i.e. right to read the 1478 * security descriptor and owner. 1479 */ 1480 READ_CONTROL = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00020000), 1481 1482 /* Right to modify the DACL in the object's security descriptor. */ 1483 WRITE_DAC = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00040000), 1484 1485 /* Right to change the owner in the object's security descriptor. */ 1486 WRITE_OWNER = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00080000), 1487 1488 /* 1489 * Right to use the object for synchronization. Enables a process to 1490 * wait until the object is in the signalled state. Some object types 1491 * do not support this access right. 1492 */ 1493 SYNCHRONIZE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00100000), 1494 1495 /* 1496 * The following STANDARD_RIGHTS_* are combinations of the above for 1497 * convenience and are defined by the Win32 API. 1498 */ 1499 1500 /* These are currently defined to READ_CONTROL. */ 1501 STANDARD_RIGHTS_READ = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00020000), 1502 STANDARD_RIGHTS_WRITE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00020000), 1503 STANDARD_RIGHTS_EXECUTE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00020000), 1504 1505 /* Combines DELETE, READ_CONTROL, WRITE_DAC, and WRITE_OWNER access. */ 1506 STANDARD_RIGHTS_REQUIRED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x000f0000), 1507 1508 /* 1509 * Combines DELETE, READ_CONTROL, WRITE_DAC, WRITE_OWNER, and 1510 * SYNCHRONIZE access. 1511 */ 1512 STANDARD_RIGHTS_ALL = const_cpu_to_le32(0x001f0000), 1513 1514 /* 1515 * The access system ACL and maximum allowed access types (bits 24 to 1516 * 25, bits 26 to 27 are reserved). 1517 */ 1518 ACCESS_SYSTEM_SECURITY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x01000000), 1519 MAXIMUM_ALLOWED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x02000000), 1520 1521 /* 1522 * The generic rights (bits 28 to 31). These map onto the standard and 1523 * specific rights. 1524 */ 1525 1526 /* Read, write, and execute access. */ 1527 GENERIC_ALL = const_cpu_to_le32(0x10000000), 1528 1529 /* Execute access. */ 1530 GENERIC_EXECUTE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x20000000), 1531 1532 /* 1533 * Write access. For files, this maps onto: 1534 * FILE_APPEND_DATA | FILE_WRITE_ATTRIBUTES | FILE_WRITE_DATA | 1535 * FILE_WRITE_EA | STANDARD_RIGHTS_WRITE | SYNCHRONIZE 1536 * For directories, the mapping has the same numerical value. See 1537 * above for the descriptions of the rights granted. 1538 */ 1539 GENERIC_WRITE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x40000000), 1540 1541 /* 1542 * Read access. For files, this maps onto: 1543 * FILE_READ_ATTRIBUTES | FILE_READ_DATA | FILE_READ_EA | 1544 * STANDARD_RIGHTS_READ | SYNCHRONIZE 1545 * For directories, the mapping has the same numberical value. See 1546 * above for the descriptions of the rights granted. 1547 */ 1548 GENERIC_READ = const_cpu_to_le32(0x80000000), 1549}; 1550 1551typedef le32 ACCESS_MASK; 1552 1553/* 1554 * The generic mapping array. Used to denote the mapping of each generic 1555 * access right to a specific access mask. 1556 * 1557 * FIXME: What exactly is this and what is it for? (AIA) 1558 */ 1559typedef struct { 1560 ACCESS_MASK generic_read; 1561 ACCESS_MASK generic_write; 1562 ACCESS_MASK generic_execute; 1563 ACCESS_MASK generic_all; 1564} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) GENERIC_MAPPING; 1565 1566/* 1567 * The predefined ACE type structures are as defined below. 1568 */ 1569 1570/* 1571 * ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE, ACCESS_DENIED_ACE, SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE, SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE 1572 */ 1573typedef struct { 1574/* 0 ACE_HEADER; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like unnamed structs. */ 1575 ACE_TYPES type; /* Type of the ACE. */ 1576 ACE_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the ACE. */ 1577 le16 size; /* Size in bytes of the ACE. */ 1578/* 4*/ ACCESS_MASK mask; /* Access mask associated with the ACE. */ 1579 1580/* 8*/ SID sid; /* The SID associated with the ACE. */ 1581} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ACCESS_ALLOWED_ACE, ACCESS_DENIED_ACE, 1582 SYSTEM_AUDIT_ACE, SYSTEM_ALARM_ACE; 1583 1584/* 1585 * The object ACE flags (32-bit). 1586 */ 1587enum { 1588 ACE_OBJECT_TYPE_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le32(1), 1589 ACE_INHERITED_OBJECT_TYPE_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le32(2), 1590}; 1591 1592typedef le32 OBJECT_ACE_FLAGS; 1593 1594typedef struct { 1595/* 0 ACE_HEADER; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like unnamed structs. */ 1596 ACE_TYPES type; /* Type of the ACE. */ 1597 ACE_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the ACE. */ 1598 le16 size; /* Size in bytes of the ACE. */ 1599/* 4*/ ACCESS_MASK mask; /* Access mask associated with the ACE. */ 1600 1601/* 8*/ OBJECT_ACE_FLAGS object_flags; /* Flags describing the object ACE. */ 1602/* 12*/ GUID object_type; 1603/* 28*/ GUID inherited_object_type; 1604 1605/* 44*/ SID sid; /* The SID associated with the ACE. */ 1606} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ACCESS_ALLOWED_OBJECT_ACE, 1607 ACCESS_DENIED_OBJECT_ACE, 1608 SYSTEM_AUDIT_OBJECT_ACE, 1609 SYSTEM_ALARM_OBJECT_ACE; 1610 1611/* 1612 * An ACL is an access-control list (ACL). 1613 * An ACL starts with an ACL header structure, which specifies the size of 1614 * the ACL and the number of ACEs it contains. The ACL header is followed by 1615 * zero or more access control entries (ACEs). The ACL as well as each ACE 1616 * are aligned on 4-byte boundaries. 1617 */ 1618typedef struct { 1619 u8 revision; /* Revision of this ACL. */ 1620 u8 alignment1; 1621 le16 size; /* Allocated space in bytes for ACL. Includes this 1622 header, the ACEs and the remaining free space. */ 1623 le16 ace_count; /* Number of ACEs in the ACL. */ 1624 le16 alignment2; 1625/* sizeof() = 8 bytes */ 1626} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) ACL; 1627 1628/* 1629 * Current constants for ACLs. 1630 */ 1631typedef enum { 1632 /* Current revision. */ 1633 ACL_REVISION = 2, 1634 ACL_REVISION_DS = 4, 1635 1636 /* History of revisions. */ 1637 ACL_REVISION1 = 1, 1638 MIN_ACL_REVISION = 2, 1639 ACL_REVISION2 = 2, 1640 ACL_REVISION3 = 3, 1641 ACL_REVISION4 = 4, 1642 MAX_ACL_REVISION = 4, 1643} ACL_CONSTANTS; 1644 1645/* 1646 * The security descriptor control flags (16-bit). 1647 * 1648 * SE_OWNER_DEFAULTED - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the SID 1649 * pointed to by the Owner field was provided by a defaulting mechanism 1650 * rather than explicitly provided by the original provider of the 1651 * security descriptor. This may affect the treatment of the SID with 1652 * respect to inheritence of an owner. 1653 * 1654 * SE_GROUP_DEFAULTED - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the SID in 1655 * the Group field was provided by a defaulting mechanism rather than 1656 * explicitly provided by the original provider of the security 1657 * descriptor. This may affect the treatment of the SID with respect to 1658 * inheritence of a primary group. 1659 * 1660 * SE_DACL_PRESENT - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the security 1661 * descriptor contains a discretionary ACL. If this flag is set and the 1662 * Dacl field of the SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR is null, then a null ACL is 1663 * explicitly being specified. 1664 * 1665 * SE_DACL_DEFAULTED - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the ACL 1666 * pointed to by the Dacl field was provided by a defaulting mechanism 1667 * rather than explicitly provided by the original provider of the 1668 * security descriptor. This may affect the treatment of the ACL with 1669 * respect to inheritence of an ACL. This flag is ignored if the 1670 * DaclPresent flag is not set. 1671 * 1672 * SE_SACL_PRESENT - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the security 1673 * descriptor contains a system ACL pointed to by the Sacl field. If this 1674 * flag is set and the Sacl field of the SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR is null, then 1675 * an empty (but present) ACL is being specified. 1676 * 1677 * SE_SACL_DEFAULTED - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the ACL 1678 * pointed to by the Sacl field was provided by a defaulting mechanism 1679 * rather than explicitly provided by the original provider of the 1680 * security descriptor. This may affect the treatment of the ACL with 1681 * respect to inheritence of an ACL. This flag is ignored if the 1682 * SaclPresent flag is not set. 1683 * 1684 * SE_SELF_RELATIVE - This boolean flag, when set, indicates that the security 1685 * descriptor is in self-relative form. In this form, all fields of the 1686 * security descriptor are contiguous in memory and all pointer fields are 1687 * expressed as offsets from the beginning of the security descriptor. 1688 */ 1689enum { 1690 SE_OWNER_DEFAULTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0001), 1691 SE_GROUP_DEFAULTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0002), 1692 SE_DACL_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0004), 1693 SE_DACL_DEFAULTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0008), 1694 1695 SE_SACL_PRESENT = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0010), 1696 SE_SACL_DEFAULTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0020), 1697 1698 SE_DACL_AUTO_INHERIT_REQ = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0100), 1699 SE_SACL_AUTO_INHERIT_REQ = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0200), 1700 SE_DACL_AUTO_INHERITED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0400), 1701 SE_SACL_AUTO_INHERITED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0800), 1702 1703 SE_DACL_PROTECTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x1000), 1704 SE_SACL_PROTECTED = const_cpu_to_le16(0x2000), 1705 SE_RM_CONTROL_VALID = const_cpu_to_le16(0x4000), 1706 SE_SELF_RELATIVE = const_cpu_to_le16(0x8000) 1707} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1708 1709typedef le16 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_CONTROL; 1710 1711/* 1712 * Self-relative security descriptor. Contains the owner and group SIDs as well 1713 * as the sacl and dacl ACLs inside the security descriptor itself. 1714 */ 1715typedef struct { 1716 u8 revision; /* Revision level of the security descriptor. */ 1717 u8 alignment; 1718 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_CONTROL control; /* Flags qualifying the type of 1719 the descriptor as well as the following fields. */ 1720 le32 owner; /* Byte offset to a SID representing an object's 1721 owner. If this is NULL, no owner SID is present in 1722 the descriptor. */ 1723 le32 group; /* Byte offset to a SID representing an object's 1724 primary group. If this is NULL, no primary group 1725 SID is present in the descriptor. */ 1726 le32 sacl; /* Byte offset to a system ACL. Only valid, if 1727 SE_SACL_PRESENT is set in the control field. If 1728 SE_SACL_PRESENT is set but sacl is NULL, a NULL ACL 1729 is specified. */ 1730 le32 dacl; /* Byte offset to a discretionary ACL. Only valid, if 1731 SE_DACL_PRESENT is set in the control field. If 1732 SE_DACL_PRESENT is set but dacl is NULL, a NULL ACL 1733 (unconditionally granting access) is specified. */ 1734/* sizeof() = 0x14 bytes */ 1735} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_RELATIVE; 1736 1737/* 1738 * Absolute security descriptor. Does not contain the owner and group SIDs, nor 1739 * the sacl and dacl ACLs inside the security descriptor. Instead, it contains 1740 * pointers to these structures in memory. Obviously, absolute security 1741 * descriptors are only useful for in memory representations of security 1742 * descriptors. On disk, a self-relative security descriptor is used. 1743 */ 1744typedef struct { 1745 u8 revision; /* Revision level of the security descriptor. */ 1746 u8 alignment; 1747 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_CONTROL control; /* Flags qualifying the type of 1748 the descriptor as well as the following fields. */ 1749 SID *owner; /* Points to a SID representing an object's owner. If 1750 this is NULL, no owner SID is present in the 1751 descriptor. */ 1752 SID *group; /* Points to a SID representing an object's primary 1753 group. If this is NULL, no primary group SID is 1754 present in the descriptor. */ 1755 ACL *sacl; /* Points to a system ACL. Only valid, if 1756 SE_SACL_PRESENT is set in the control field. If 1757 SE_SACL_PRESENT is set but sacl is NULL, a NULL ACL 1758 is specified. */ 1759 ACL *dacl; /* Points to a discretionary ACL. Only valid, if 1760 SE_DACL_PRESENT is set in the control field. If 1761 SE_DACL_PRESENT is set but dacl is NULL, a NULL ACL 1762 (unconditionally granting access) is specified. */ 1763} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR; 1764 1765/* 1766 * Current constants for security descriptors. 1767 */ 1768typedef enum { 1769 /* Current revision. */ 1770 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_REVISION = 1, 1771 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_REVISION1 = 1, 1772 1773 /* The sizes of both the absolute and relative security descriptors is 1774 the same as pointers, at least on ia32 architecture are 32-bit. */ 1775 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_MIN_LENGTH = sizeof(SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR), 1776} SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_CONSTANTS; 1777 1778/* 1779 * Attribute: Security descriptor (0x50). A standard self-relative security 1780 * descriptor. 1781 * 1782 * NOTE: Can be resident or non-resident. 1783 * NOTE: Not used in NTFS 3.0+, as security descriptors are stored centrally 1784 * in FILE_Secure and the correct descriptor is found using the security_id 1785 * from the standard information attribute. 1786 */ 1787typedef SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_RELATIVE SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_ATTR; 1788 1789/* 1790 * On NTFS 3.0+, all security descriptors are stored in FILE_Secure. Only one 1791 * referenced instance of each unique security descriptor is stored. 1792 * 1793 * FILE_Secure contains no unnamed data attribute, i.e. it has zero length. It 1794 * does, however, contain two indexes ($SDH and $SII) as well as a named data 1795 * stream ($SDS). 1796 * 1797 * Every unique security descriptor is assigned a unique security identifier 1798 * (security_id, not to be confused with a SID). The security_id is unique for 1799 * the NTFS volume and is used as an index into the $SII index, which maps 1800 * security_ids to the security descriptor's storage location within the $SDS 1801 * data attribute. The $SII index is sorted by ascending security_id. 1802 * 1803 * A simple hash is computed from each security descriptor. This hash is used 1804 * as an index into the $SDH index, which maps security descriptor hashes to 1805 * the security descriptor's storage location within the $SDS data attribute. 1806 * The $SDH index is sorted by security descriptor hash and is stored in a B+ 1807 * tree. When searching $SDH (with the intent of determining whether or not a 1808 * new security descriptor is already present in the $SDS data stream), if a 1809 * matching hash is found, but the security descriptors do not match, the 1810 * search in the $SDH index is continued, searching for a next matching hash. 1811 * 1812 * When a precise match is found, the security_id coresponding to the security 1813 * descriptor in the $SDS attribute is read from the found $SDH index entry and 1814 * is stored in the $STANDARD_INFORMATION attribute of the file/directory to 1815 * which the security descriptor is being applied. The $STANDARD_INFORMATION 1816 * attribute is present in all base mft records (i.e. in all files and 1817 * directories). 1818 * 1819 * If a match is not found, the security descriptor is assigned a new unique 1820 * security_id and is added to the $SDS data attribute. Then, entries 1821 * referencing the this security descriptor in the $SDS data attribute are 1822 * added to the $SDH and $SII indexes. 1823 * 1824 * Note: Entries are never deleted from FILE_Secure, even if nothing 1825 * references an entry any more. 1826 */ 1827 1828/* 1829 * This header precedes each security descriptor in the $SDS data stream. 1830 * This is also the index entry data part of both the $SII and $SDH indexes. 1831 */ 1832typedef struct { 1833 le32 hash; /* Hash of the security descriptor. */ 1834 le32 security_id; /* The security_id assigned to the descriptor. */ 1835 le64 offset; /* Byte offset of this entry in the $SDS stream. */ 1836 le32 length; /* Size in bytes of this entry in $SDS stream. */ 1837} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER; 1838 1839/* 1840 * The $SDS data stream contains the security descriptors, aligned on 16-byte 1841 * boundaries, sorted by security_id in a B+ tree. Security descriptors cannot 1842 * cross 256kib boundaries (this restriction is imposed by the Windows cache 1843 * manager). Each security descriptor is contained in a SDS_ENTRY structure. 1844 * Also, each security descriptor is stored twice in the $SDS stream with a 1845 * fixed offset of 0x40000 bytes (256kib, the Windows cache manager's max size) 1846 * between them; i.e. if a SDS_ENTRY specifies an offset of 0x51d0, then the 1847 * the first copy of the security descriptor will be at offset 0x51d0 in the 1848 * $SDS data stream and the second copy will be at offset 0x451d0. 1849 */ 1850typedef struct { 1851/*Ofs*/ 1852/* 0 SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_HEADER; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like 1853 unnamed structs. */ 1854 le32 hash; /* Hash of the security descriptor. */ 1855 le32 security_id; /* The security_id assigned to the descriptor. */ 1856 le64 offset; /* Byte offset of this entry in the $SDS stream. */ 1857 le32 length; /* Size in bytes of this entry in $SDS stream. */ 1858/* 20*/ SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR_RELATIVE sid; /* The self-relative security 1859 descriptor. */ 1860} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SDS_ENTRY; 1861 1862/* 1863 * The index entry key used in the $SII index. The collation type is 1864 * COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONG. 1865 */ 1866typedef struct { 1867 le32 security_id; /* The security_id assigned to the descriptor. */ 1868} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SII_INDEX_KEY; 1869 1870/* 1871 * The index entry key used in the $SDH index. The keys are sorted first by 1872 * hash and then by security_id. The collation rule is 1873 * COLLATION_NTOFS_SECURITY_HASH. 1874 */ 1875typedef struct { 1876 le32 hash; /* Hash of the security descriptor. */ 1877 le32 security_id; /* The security_id assigned to the descriptor. */ 1878} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) SDH_INDEX_KEY; 1879 1880/* 1881 * Attribute: Volume name (0x60). 1882 * 1883 * NOTE: Always resident. 1884 * NOTE: Present only in FILE_Volume. 1885 */ 1886typedef struct { 1887 ntfschar name[0]; /* The name of the volume in Unicode. */ 1888} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) VOLUME_NAME; 1889 1890/* 1891 * Possible flags for the volume (16-bit). 1892 */ 1893enum { 1894 VOLUME_IS_DIRTY = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0001), 1895 VOLUME_RESIZE_LOG_FILE = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0002), 1896 VOLUME_UPGRADE_ON_MOUNT = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0004), 1897 VOLUME_MOUNTED_ON_NT4 = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0008), 1898 1899 VOLUME_DELETE_USN_UNDERWAY = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0010), 1900 VOLUME_REPAIR_OBJECT_ID = const_cpu_to_le16(0x0020), 1901 1902 VOLUME_MODIFIED_BY_CHKDSK = const_cpu_to_le16(0x8000), 1903 1904 VOLUME_FLAGS_MASK = const_cpu_to_le16(0x803f), 1905 1906 /* To make our life easier when checking if we must mount read-only. */ 1907 VOLUME_MUST_MOUNT_RO_MASK = const_cpu_to_le16(0x8027), 1908} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1909 1910typedef le16 VOLUME_FLAGS; 1911 1912/* 1913 * Attribute: Volume information (0x70). 1914 * 1915 * NOTE: Always resident. 1916 * NOTE: Present only in FILE_Volume. 1917 * NOTE: Windows 2000 uses NTFS 3.0 while Windows NT4 service pack 6a uses 1918 * NTFS 1.2. I haven't personally seen other values yet. 1919 */ 1920typedef struct { 1921 le64 reserved; /* Not used (yet?). */ 1922 u8 major_ver; /* Major version of the ntfs format. */ 1923 u8 minor_ver; /* Minor version of the ntfs format. */ 1924 VOLUME_FLAGS flags; /* Bit array of VOLUME_* flags. */ 1925} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) VOLUME_INFORMATION; 1926 1927/* 1928 * Attribute: Data attribute (0x80). 1929 * 1930 * NOTE: Can be resident or non-resident. 1931 * 1932 * Data contents of a file (i.e. the unnamed stream) or of a named stream. 1933 */ 1934typedef struct { 1935 u8 data[0]; /* The file's data contents. */ 1936} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) DATA_ATTR; 1937 1938/* 1939 * Index header flags (8-bit). 1940 */ 1941enum { 1942 /* 1943 * When index header is in an index root attribute: 1944 */ 1945 SMALL_INDEX = 0, /* The index is small enough to fit inside the index 1946 root attribute and there is no index allocation 1947 attribute present. */ 1948 LARGE_INDEX = 1, /* The index is too large to fit in the index root 1949 attribute and/or an index allocation attribute is 1950 present. */ 1951 /* 1952 * When index header is in an index block, i.e. is part of index 1953 * allocation attribute: 1954 */ 1955 LEAF_NODE = 0, /* This is a leaf node, i.e. there are no more nodes 1956 branching off it. */ 1957 INDEX_NODE = 1, /* This node indexes other nodes, i.e. it is not a leaf 1958 node. */ 1959 NODE_MASK = 1, /* Mask for accessing the *_NODE bits. */ 1960} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 1961 1962typedef u8 INDEX_HEADER_FLAGS; 1963 1964/* 1965 * This is the header for indexes, describing the INDEX_ENTRY records, which 1966 * follow the INDEX_HEADER. Together the index header and the index entries 1967 * make up a complete index. 1968 * 1969 * IMPORTANT NOTE: The offset, length and size structure members are counted 1970 * relative to the start of the index header structure and not relative to the 1971 * start of the index root or index allocation structures themselves. 1972 */ 1973typedef struct { 1974 le32 entries_offset; /* Byte offset to first INDEX_ENTRY 1975 aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 1976 le32 index_length; /* Data size of the index in bytes, 1977 i.e. bytes used from allocated 1978 size, aligned to 8-byte boundary. */ 1979 le32 allocated_size; /* Byte size of this index (block), 1980 multiple of 8 bytes. */ 1981 /* NOTE: For the index root attribute, the above two numbers are always 1982 equal, as the attribute is resident and it is resized as needed. In 1983 the case of the index allocation attribute the attribute is not 1984 resident and hence the allocated_size is a fixed value and must 1985 equal the index_block_size specified by the INDEX_ROOT attribute 1986 corresponding to the INDEX_ALLOCATION attribute this INDEX_BLOCK 1987 belongs to. */ 1988 INDEX_HEADER_FLAGS flags; /* Bit field of INDEX_HEADER_FLAGS. */ 1989 u8 reserved[3]; /* Reserved/align to 8-byte boundary. */ 1990} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) INDEX_HEADER; 1991 1992/* 1993 * Attribute: Index root (0x90). 1994 * 1995 * NOTE: Always resident. 1996 * 1997 * This is followed by a sequence of index entries (INDEX_ENTRY structures) 1998 * as described by the index header. 1999 * 2000 * When a directory is small enough to fit inside the index root then this 2001 * is the only attribute describing the directory. When the directory is too 2002 * large to fit in the index root, on the other hand, two aditional attributes 2003 * are present: an index allocation attribute, containing sub-nodes of the B+ 2004 * directory tree (see below), and a bitmap attribute, describing which virtual 2005 * cluster numbers (vcns) in the index allocation attribute are in use by an 2006 * index block. 2007 * 2008 * NOTE: The root directory (FILE_root) contains an entry for itself. Other 2009 * dircetories do not contain entries for themselves, though. 2010 */ 2011typedef struct { 2012 ATTR_TYPE type; /* Type of the indexed attribute. Is 2013 $FILE_NAME for directories, zero 2014 for view indexes. No other values 2015 allowed. */ 2016 COLLATION_RULE collation_rule; /* Collation rule used to sort the 2017 index entries. If type is $FILE_NAME, 2018 this must be COLLATION_FILE_NAME. */ 2019 le32 index_block_size; /* Size of each index block in bytes (in 2020 the index allocation attribute). */ 2021 u8 clusters_per_index_block; /* Cluster size of each index block (in 2022 the index allocation attribute), when 2023 an index block is >= than a cluster, 2024 otherwise this will be the log of 2025 the size (like how the encoding of 2026 the mft record size and the index 2027 record size found in the boot sector 2028 work). Has to be a power of 2. */ 2029 u8 reserved[3]; /* Reserved/align to 8-byte boundary. */ 2030 INDEX_HEADER index; /* Index header describing the 2031 following index entries. */ 2032} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) INDEX_ROOT; 2033 2034/* 2035 * Attribute: Index allocation (0xa0). 2036 * 2037 * NOTE: Always non-resident (doesn't make sense to be resident anyway!). 2038 * 2039 * This is an array of index blocks. Each index block starts with an 2040 * INDEX_BLOCK structure containing an index header, followed by a sequence of 2041 * index entries (INDEX_ENTRY structures), as described by the INDEX_HEADER. 2042 */ 2043typedef struct { 2044/* 0 NTFS_RECORD; -- Unfolded here as gcc doesn't like unnamed structs. */ 2045 NTFS_RECORD_TYPE magic; /* Magic is "INDX". */ 2046 le16 usa_ofs; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition. */ 2047 le16 usa_count; /* See NTFS_RECORD definition. */ 2048 2049/* 8*/ sle64 lsn; /* $LogFile sequence number of the last 2050 modification of this index block. */ 2051/* 16*/ leVCN index_block_vcn; /* Virtual cluster number of the index block. 2052 If the cluster_size on the volume is <= the 2053 index_block_size of the directory, 2054 index_block_vcn counts in units of clusters, 2055 and in units of sectors otherwise. */ 2056/* 24*/ INDEX_HEADER index; /* Describes the following index entries. */ 2057/* sizeof()= 40 (0x28) bytes */ 2058/* 2059 * When creating the index block, we place the update sequence array at this 2060 * offset, i.e. before we start with the index entries. This also makes sense, 2061 * otherwise we could run into problems with the update sequence array 2062 * containing in itself the last two bytes of a sector which would mean that 2063 * multi sector transfer protection wouldn't work. As you can't protect data 2064 * by overwriting it since you then can't get it back... 2065 * When reading use the data from the ntfs record header. 2066 */ 2067} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) INDEX_BLOCK; 2068 2069typedef INDEX_BLOCK INDEX_ALLOCATION; 2070 2071/* 2072 * The system file FILE_Extend/$Reparse contains an index named $R listing 2073 * all reparse points on the volume. The index entry keys are as defined 2074 * below. Note, that there is no index data associated with the index entries. 2075 * 2076 * The index entries are sorted by the index key file_id. The collation rule is 2077 * COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONGS. FIXME: Verify whether the reparse_tag is not the 2078 * primary key / is not a key at all. (AIA) 2079 */ 2080typedef struct { 2081 le32 reparse_tag; /* Reparse point type (inc. flags). */ 2082 leMFT_REF file_id; /* Mft record of the file containing the 2083 reparse point attribute. */ 2084} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) REPARSE_INDEX_KEY; 2085 2086/* 2087 * Quota flags (32-bit). 2088 * 2089 * The user quota flags. Names explain meaning. 2090 */ 2091enum { 2092 QUOTA_FLAG_DEFAULT_LIMITS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 2093 QUOTA_FLAG_LIMIT_REACHED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000002), 2094 QUOTA_FLAG_ID_DELETED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000004), 2095 2096 QUOTA_FLAG_USER_MASK = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000007), 2097 /* This is a bit mask for the user quota flags. */ 2098 2099 /* 2100 * These flags are only present in the quota defaults index entry, i.e. 2101 * in the entry where owner_id = QUOTA_DEFAULTS_ID. 2102 */ 2103 QUOTA_FLAG_TRACKING_ENABLED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000010), 2104 QUOTA_FLAG_ENFORCEMENT_ENABLED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000020), 2105 QUOTA_FLAG_TRACKING_REQUESTED = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000040), 2106 QUOTA_FLAG_LOG_THRESHOLD = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000080), 2107 2108 QUOTA_FLAG_LOG_LIMIT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000100), 2109 QUOTA_FLAG_OUT_OF_DATE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000200), 2110 QUOTA_FLAG_CORRUPT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000400), 2111 QUOTA_FLAG_PENDING_DELETES = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000800), 2112}; 2113 2114typedef le32 QUOTA_FLAGS; 2115 2116/* 2117 * The system file FILE_Extend/$Quota contains two indexes $O and $Q. Quotas 2118 * are on a per volume and per user basis. 2119 * 2120 * The $Q index contains one entry for each existing user_id on the volume. The 2121 * index key is the user_id of the user/group owning this quota control entry, 2122 * i.e. the key is the owner_id. The user_id of the owner of a file, i.e. the 2123 * owner_id, is found in the standard information attribute. The collation rule 2124 * for $Q is COLLATION_NTOFS_ULONG. 2125 * 2126 * The $O index contains one entry for each user/group who has been assigned 2127 * a quota on that volume. The index key holds the SID of the user_id the 2128 * entry belongs to, i.e. the owner_id. The collation rule for $O is 2129 * COLLATION_NTOFS_SID. 2130 * 2131 * The $O index entry data is the user_id of the user corresponding to the SID. 2132 * This user_id is used as an index into $Q to find the quota control entry 2133 * associated with the SID. 2134 * 2135 * The $Q index entry data is the quota control entry and is defined below. 2136 */ 2137typedef struct { 2138 le32 version; /* Currently equals 2. */ 2139 QUOTA_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing this quota entry. */ 2140 le64 bytes_used; /* How many bytes of the quota are in use. */ 2141 sle64 change_time; /* Last time this quota entry was changed. */ 2142 sle64 threshold; /* Soft quota (-1 if not limited). */ 2143 sle64 limit; /* Hard quota (-1 if not limited). */ 2144 sle64 exceeded_time; /* How long the soft quota has been exceeded. */ 2145 SID sid; /* The SID of the user/object associated with 2146 this quota entry. Equals zero for the quota 2147 defaults entry (and in fact on a WinXP 2148 volume, it is not present at all). */ 2149} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) QUOTA_CONTROL_ENTRY; 2150 2151/* 2152 * Predefined owner_id values (32-bit). 2153 */ 2154enum { 2155 QUOTA_INVALID_ID = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000000), 2156 QUOTA_DEFAULTS_ID = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 2157 QUOTA_FIRST_USER_ID = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000100), 2158}; 2159 2160/* 2161 * Current constants for quota control entries. 2162 */ 2163typedef enum { 2164 /* Current version. */ 2165 QUOTA_VERSION = 2, 2166} QUOTA_CONTROL_ENTRY_CONSTANTS; 2167 2168/* 2169 * Index entry flags (16-bit). 2170 */ 2171enum { 2172 INDEX_ENTRY_NODE = const_cpu_to_le16(1), /* This entry contains a 2173 sub-node, i.e. a reference to an index block in form of 2174 a virtual cluster number (see below). */ 2175 INDEX_ENTRY_END = const_cpu_to_le16(2), /* This signifies the last 2176 entry in an index block. The index entry does not 2177 represent a file but it can point to a sub-node. */ 2178 2179 INDEX_ENTRY_SPACE_FILLER = const_cpu_to_le16(0xffff), /* gcc: Force 2180 enum bit width to 16-bit. */ 2181} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 2182 2183typedef le16 INDEX_ENTRY_FLAGS; 2184 2185/* 2186 * This the index entry header (see below). 2187 */ 2188typedef struct { 2189/* 0*/ union { 2190 struct { /* Only valid when INDEX_ENTRY_END is not set. */ 2191 leMFT_REF indexed_file; /* The mft reference of the file 2192 described by this index 2193 entry. Used for directory 2194 indexes. */ 2195 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) dir; 2196 struct { /* Used for views/indexes to find the entry's data. */ 2197 le16 data_offset; /* Data byte offset from this 2198 INDEX_ENTRY. Follows the 2199 index key. */ 2200 le16 data_length; /* Data length in bytes. */ 2201 le32 reservedV; /* Reserved (zero). */ 2202 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) vi; 2203 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) data; 2204/* 8*/ le16 length; /* Byte size of this index entry, multiple of 2205 8-bytes. */ 2206/* 10*/ le16 key_length; /* Byte size of the key value, which is in the 2207 index entry. It follows field reserved. Not 2208 multiple of 8-bytes. */ 2209/* 12*/ INDEX_ENTRY_FLAGS flags; /* Bit field of INDEX_ENTRY_* flags. */ 2210/* 14*/ le16 reserved; /* Reserved/align to 8-byte boundary. */ 2211/* sizeof() = 16 bytes */ 2212} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) INDEX_ENTRY_HEADER; 2213 2214/* 2215 * This is an index entry. A sequence of such entries follows each INDEX_HEADER 2216 * structure. Together they make up a complete index. The index follows either 2217 * an index root attribute or an index allocation attribute. 2218 * 2219 * NOTE: Before NTFS 3.0 only filename attributes were indexed. 2220 */ 2221typedef struct { 2222/*Ofs*/ 2223/* 0 INDEX_ENTRY_HEADER; -- Unfolded here as gcc dislikes unnamed structs. */ 2224 union { 2225 struct { /* Only valid when INDEX_ENTRY_END is not set. */ 2226 leMFT_REF indexed_file; /* The mft reference of the file 2227 described by this index 2228 entry. Used for directory 2229 indexes. */ 2230 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) dir; 2231 struct { /* Used for views/indexes to find the entry's data. */ 2232 le16 data_offset; /* Data byte offset from this 2233 INDEX_ENTRY. Follows the 2234 index key. */ 2235 le16 data_length; /* Data length in bytes. */ 2236 le32 reservedV; /* Reserved (zero). */ 2237 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) vi; 2238 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) data; 2239 le16 length; /* Byte size of this index entry, multiple of 2240 8-bytes. */ 2241 le16 key_length; /* Byte size of the key value, which is in the 2242 index entry. It follows field reserved. Not 2243 multiple of 8-bytes. */ 2244 INDEX_ENTRY_FLAGS flags; /* Bit field of INDEX_ENTRY_* flags. */ 2245 le16 reserved; /* Reserved/align to 8-byte boundary. */ 2246 2247/* 16*/ union { /* The key of the indexed attribute. NOTE: Only present 2248 if INDEX_ENTRY_END bit in flags is not set. NOTE: On 2249 NTFS versions before 3.0 the only valid key is the 2250 FILE_NAME_ATTR. On NTFS 3.0+ the following 2251 additional index keys are defined: */ 2252 FILE_NAME_ATTR file_name;/* $I30 index in directories. */ 2253 SII_INDEX_KEY sii; /* $SII index in $Secure. */ 2254 SDH_INDEX_KEY sdh; /* $SDH index in $Secure. */ 2255 GUID object_id; /* $O index in FILE_Extend/$ObjId: The 2256 object_id of the mft record found in 2257 the data part of the index. */ 2258 REPARSE_INDEX_KEY reparse; /* $R index in 2259 FILE_Extend/$Reparse. */ 2260 SID sid; /* $O index in FILE_Extend/$Quota: 2261 SID of the owner of the user_id. */ 2262 le32 owner_id; /* $Q index in FILE_Extend/$Quota: 2263 user_id of the owner of the quota 2264 control entry in the data part of 2265 the index. */ 2266 } __attribute__ ((__packed__)) key; 2267 /* The (optional) index data is inserted here when creating. */ 2268 // leVCN vcn; /* If INDEX_ENTRY_NODE bit in flags is set, the last 2269 // eight bytes of this index entry contain the virtual 2270 // cluster number of the index block that holds the 2271 // entries immediately preceding the current entry (the 2272 // vcn references the corresponding cluster in the data 2273 // of the non-resident index allocation attribute). If 2274 // the key_length is zero, then the vcn immediately 2275 // follows the INDEX_ENTRY_HEADER. Regardless of 2276 // key_length, the address of the 8-byte boundary 2277 // alligned vcn of INDEX_ENTRY{_HEADER} *ie is given by 2278 // (char*)ie + le16_to_cpu(ie*)->length) - sizeof(VCN), 2279 // where sizeof(VCN) can be hardcoded as 8 if wanted. */ 2280} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) INDEX_ENTRY; 2281 2282/* 2283 * Attribute: Bitmap (0xb0). 2284 * 2285 * Contains an array of bits (aka a bitfield). 2286 * 2287 * When used in conjunction with the index allocation attribute, each bit 2288 * corresponds to one index block within the index allocation attribute. Thus 2289 * the number of bits in the bitmap * index block size / cluster size is the 2290 * number of clusters in the index allocation attribute. 2291 */ 2292typedef struct { 2293 u8 bitmap[0]; /* Array of bits. */ 2294} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) BITMAP_ATTR; 2295 2296/* 2297 * The reparse point tag defines the type of the reparse point. It also 2298 * includes several flags, which further describe the reparse point. 2299 * 2300 * The reparse point tag is an unsigned 32-bit value divided in three parts: 2301 * 2302 * 1. The least significant 16 bits (i.e. bits 0 to 15) specifiy the type of 2303 * the reparse point. 2304 * 2. The 13 bits after this (i.e. bits 16 to 28) are reserved for future use. 2305 * 3. The most significant three bits are flags describing the reparse point. 2306 * They are defined as follows: 2307 * bit 29: Name surrogate bit. If set, the filename is an alias for 2308 * another object in the system. 2309 * bit 30: High-latency bit. If set, accessing the first byte of data will 2310 * be slow. (E.g. the data is stored on a tape drive.) 2311 * bit 31: Microsoft bit. If set, the tag is owned by Microsoft. User 2312 * defined tags have to use zero here. 2313 * 2314 * These are the predefined reparse point tags: 2315 */ 2316enum { 2317 IO_REPARSE_TAG_IS_ALIAS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x20000000), 2318 IO_REPARSE_TAG_IS_HIGH_LATENCY = const_cpu_to_le32(0x40000000), 2319 IO_REPARSE_TAG_IS_MICROSOFT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x80000000), 2320 2321 IO_REPARSE_TAG_RESERVED_ZERO = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000000), 2322 IO_REPARSE_TAG_RESERVED_ONE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 2323 IO_REPARSE_TAG_RESERVED_RANGE = const_cpu_to_le32(0x00000001), 2324 2325 IO_REPARSE_TAG_NSS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x68000005), 2326 IO_REPARSE_TAG_NSS_RECOVER = const_cpu_to_le32(0x68000006), 2327 IO_REPARSE_TAG_SIS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x68000007), 2328 IO_REPARSE_TAG_DFS = const_cpu_to_le32(0x68000008), 2329 2330 IO_REPARSE_TAG_MOUNT_POINT = const_cpu_to_le32(0x88000003), 2331 2332 IO_REPARSE_TAG_HSM = const_cpu_to_le32(0xa8000004), 2333 2334 IO_REPARSE_TAG_SYMBOLIC_LINK = const_cpu_to_le32(0xe8000000), 2335 2336 IO_REPARSE_TAG_VALID_VALUES = const_cpu_to_le32(0xe000ffff), 2337}; 2338 2339/* 2340 * Attribute: Reparse point (0xc0). 2341 * 2342 * NOTE: Can be resident or non-resident. 2343 */ 2344typedef struct { 2345 le32 reparse_tag; /* Reparse point type (inc. flags). */ 2346 le16 reparse_data_length; /* Byte size of reparse data. */ 2347 le16 reserved; /* Align to 8-byte boundary. */ 2348 u8 reparse_data[0]; /* Meaning depends on reparse_tag. */ 2349} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) REPARSE_POINT; 2350 2351/* 2352 * Attribute: Extended attribute (EA) information (0xd0). 2353 * 2354 * NOTE: Always resident. (Is this true???) 2355 */ 2356typedef struct { 2357 le16 ea_length; /* Byte size of the packed extended 2358 attributes. */ 2359 le16 need_ea_count; /* The number of extended attributes which have 2360 the NEED_EA bit set. */ 2361 le32 ea_query_length; /* Byte size of the buffer required to query 2362 the extended attributes when calling 2363 ZwQueryEaFile() in Windows NT/2k. I.e. the 2364 byte size of the unpacked extended 2365 attributes. */ 2366} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) EA_INFORMATION; 2367 2368/* 2369 * Extended attribute flags (8-bit). 2370 */ 2371enum { 2372 NEED_EA = 0x80 2373} __attribute__ ((__packed__)); 2374 2375typedef u8 EA_FLAGS; 2376 2377/* 2378 * Attribute: Extended attribute (EA) (0xe0). 2379 * 2380 * NOTE: Always non-resident. (Is this true?) 2381 * 2382 * Like the attribute list and the index buffer list, the EA attribute value is 2383 * a sequence of EA_ATTR variable length records. 2384 * 2385 * FIXME: It appears weird that the EA name is not unicode. Is it true? 2386 */ 2387typedef struct { 2388 le32 next_entry_offset; /* Offset to the next EA_ATTR. */ 2389 EA_FLAGS flags; /* Flags describing the EA. */ 2390 u8 ea_name_length; /* Length of the name of the EA in bytes. */ 2391 le16 ea_value_length; /* Byte size of the EA's value. */ 2392 u8 ea_name[0]; /* Name of the EA. */ 2393 u8 ea_value[0]; /* The value of the EA. Immediately follows 2394 the name. */ 2395} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) EA_ATTR; 2396 2397/* 2398 * Attribute: Property set (0xf0). 2399 * 2400 * Intended to support Native Structure Storage (NSS) - a feature removed from 2401 * NTFS 3.0 during beta testing. 2402 */ 2403typedef struct { 2404 /* Irrelevant as feature unused. */ 2405} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) PROPERTY_SET; 2406 2407/* 2408 * Attribute: Logged utility stream (0x100). 2409 * 2410 * NOTE: Can be resident or non-resident. 2411 * 2412 * Operations on this attribute are logged to the journal ($LogFile) like 2413 * normal metadata changes. 2414 * 2415 * Used by the Encrypting File System (EFS). All encrypted files have this 2416 * attribute with the name $EFS. 2417 */ 2418typedef struct { 2419 /* Can be anything the creator chooses. */ 2420 /* EFS uses it as follows: */ 2421 // FIXME: Type this info, verifying it along the way. (AIA) 2422} __attribute__ ((__packed__)) LOGGED_UTILITY_STREAM, EFS_ATTR; 2423 2424#endif /* _LINUX_NTFS_LAYOUT_H */