For 64-bit (e.g. x86_64) Linux the 64-bit wide types resolve to long,
not long long as is the case in 32-bit (e.g. i386) Linux. So we need an
explicit cast to long long for 64-bit types since the format string must
specify the 'll' modifier in order to print 64-bit values.
This commit addresses issues where little-endian variables are emitted
raw to a log or output stream which is to be interpreted by the user.
Outputting data in non-native endianness can cause confusion for anybody
attempting to debug issues with a file system.
Older msvcrt.dll (on XP and earlier) did not support "%ll" print editing
formats frequently used by ntfsclone. So translate them to "%I64" when
running on Windows. This format appears to be supported by all Windows
versions. Error messages from libntfs-3g are still not translated.
Upgrade the Win32 interface (win32_io.c) which was designed for Cygwin
so that it can be used for using the ntfsprogs utilities on native Windows.
Two new entries are added for truncating a file and creating a sparse
file, both of which not being supported through msvcrt.dll.
The MS_* flags originated from system constants. However the flags
passed to ntfs_mount were really unrelated to the system constants and
many new MS_* flags had to be introduced as different features were
added to the library. Those flags had no counterparts in any system
APIs, so using the same naming scheme is inappropriate.
Instead, let's namespace these flags similarly to what has already been
done in ntfsprogs/libntfs earlier. This avoids any possible conflicts
with system constants.
The values of the flags themselves are kept the same as earlier, so
backward compatibility is retained.
This bug led 'utils_mftrec_in_use' to use 'cached' data before it had
been initialized (i.e. its contents was undefined), producing incorrect
results for the first 3584 MFT entries.
Note: The NTFS_MNT_FORCE, in addition to what MS_RECOVER does, also bypasses the check for the 'dirty' bit in libntfs' ntfs_mount.
However, this check does not exist in libntfs-3g (libntfs-3g will not check or change the dirty bit, being confident that it can handle volumes marked as 'dirty'), so in essence the same behaviour is achieved with MS_RECOVER.
This is not a perfect conversion. The VOLUME_IS_DIRTY flag reflects the _current_ state of the volume dirty bit and not the mount-time state.
However, since libntfs-3g (as opposed to libntfs) does not automatically change the dirty bit on mount and unmount (only when ntfs_volume_write_flags is called explicitly), and these tests are done directly after a mount (ntfsclone.c, ntfscp.c, ntfsresize.c, ntfswipe.c, utils.c) or when the volume is in an appropriate state (ntfsfix.c), the result will be the same.
calling strtoll(). This automagically allows specification of
numbers in hex (and octal if anyone is crazy enough to use that) in
addition to decimal numbers on the command line options to most if
not all utilities. (Anton)