INTRODUCTION ============ The NTFS-3G driver is an open source, freely available read/write NTFS driver for Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X, NetBSD, Solaris and Haiku. It provides safe and fast handling of the Windows XP, Windows Server 2003, Windows 2000, Windows Vista, and Windows Server 2008 file systems. The purpose of the project is to develop, continuously quality test and support a trustable, featureful and high performance solution for hardware platforms and operating systems whose users need to reliably interoperate with NTFS. Besides this practical goal, the project also aims to explore the limits of the hybrid, kernel/user space filesystem driver approach, performance, reliability and feature richness per invested effort wise. This specific version has support for new features such as file ownership and permissions, Posix ACLs, junction points, extended attributes and creating compressed files. Parameter files in the hidden directory .NTFS-3G may be required to enable them, please get the instructions from http://www.tuxera.com/community/ntfs-3g-advanced/ News, support answers, problem submission instructions, support and discussion forums, performance numbers and other information are available on the project web site at http://tuxera.com/forum/ QUICK INSTALLATION ================== Linux: Make sure you have the basic development tools and the kernel includes the FUSE kernel module. Then unpack the source tarball and type: ./configure make make install # or 'sudo make install' if you aren't root. Please note that NTFS-3G doesn't require the FUSE user space package anymore. Non-Linux: Please see the NTFS-3G web page for OS specific installation and source packages. USAGE ===== If there was no error during installation then the NTFS volume can be read-write mounted for everybody the following way as the root user (unmount the volume if it was already mounted, and replace /dev/sda1 and /mnt/windows, if needed): mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /mnt/windows or ntfs-3g /dev/sda1 /mnt/windows Please see the ntfs-3g manual page for more options and examples. You can also make NTFS to be mounted during boot by putting the below line at the __END__ of the /etc/fstab file: /dev/sda1 /mnt/windows ntfs-3g defaults 0 0