Provided by: ntfs2btrfs_20210923-2_amd64 bug

NAME

       ntfs2btrfs - convert ntfs filesystem to btrfs filesystem

SYNOPSIS

       ntfs2btrfs [options] device

DESCRIPTION

       This  is  a  tool  which  does  in-place  conversion  of  Microsoft's  NTFS filesystem to the open-source
       filesystem Btrfs, much as btrfs-convert does for ext2.

OPTIONS

       -c <ALGO>, --compress=<ALGO>
           Uses the specified algorithm to recompress files that  are  compressed  on  the  NTFS  volume;  valid
           choices  are  zstd,  lzo, zlib, or none.  If you don't specify any value, zstd will be used, assuming
           it's been compiled in.

       -h <ALGO>, --hash=<ALGO>
           Uses the specified checksumming algorithm; valid choices are crc32c, xxhash, sha256, and blake2.  The
           first of these will be used by default, and should be fine for most purposes.

       -r, --rollback
           Tries to restore the original NTFS filesystem. See ROLLBACK below.

ROLLBACK

       The  original  filesystem image is saved as image/ntfs.img as a reflink copy. You can restore this at any
       time by using the rollback option, provided that you've not moved the data by doing a  balance.  Bear  in
       mind  that  this  restores the volume to how it was when you did the conversion, meaning that any changes
       you've made since will be lost.

       If you decide to keep the conversion, you can remove the image subvolume at any point to free up space.

XATTRS

       Various bits of NTFS-specific data are stored as Btrfs xattrs, in a manner that the Windows btrfs  driver
       understands  (https://github.com/maharmstone/btrfs). Some should also be understood by tools such as Wine
       and Samba, but YMMV.

       • The NTFS attribute value is stored as a hex string at user.DOSATTRIB.

       • The reparse points on directories are stored at user.reparse. NTFS symlinks should  be  converted  into
         POSIX symlinks. The data for other reparse points will be stored as the contents of the files.

       • The NT security descriptor is stored as security.NTACL.

       • Alternate  data  streams  on  files  are  stored  in  the user namespace, e.g. :Zone.Identifier becomes
         user.Zone.Identifier.

SEE ALSO

       btrfs(8), mkfs.btrfs(8).

AUTHOR

       Written by Mark Harmstone (mark@harmstone.com).

WEB

       https://github.com/maharmstone/ntfs2btrfs

ntfs2btrfs 20210923                              September 2021                                    NTFS2BTRFS(8)