Sorry, I have found this advice in email list history. Thank you for
understanding.
On Friday, April 17, 2020, 07:17:14 PM GMT+3, Flaviu2 <[email protected]>
wrote:
I do not understand why you partially use the ntfs-3g startup
code, without using the routines which ntfs-3g uses for
accessing the partitions when running on Windows.
You said about ntfs_device_win32_open from win32_io.c file ? On Thursday,
April 16, 2020, 08:28:30 PM GMT+3, Flaviu2 via ntfs-3g-devel
<[email protected]> wrote:
I do not understand why you partially use the ntfs-3g startup
code, without using the routines which ntfs-3g uses for
accessing the partitions when running on Windows.
Seem that is only chance ... I'll try this ... can you give some
advices/functions as you better this library ? Kindly thank you for your time
and patience !
Flaviu.
On Tuesday, April 14, 2020, 11:31:46 PM GMT+3, Jean-Pierre André
<[email protected]> wrote:
Flaviu2 wrote:
> Is there any way to know for sure if I accessed alright the NTFS drive ?
The purpose of the function ntfs_boot_sector_is_ntfs() is to
be reasonably confident about it. If the function fails, you
know you are NOT processing an ntfs partition.
I do not understand why you partially use the ntfs-3g startup
code, without using the routines which ntfs-3g uses for
accessing the partitions when running on Windows.
IMHO this list is not the best place to get advice on how
to access a partition from a Windows application.
Jean-Pierre
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