how to view hidden files on an NTFS drive that were copied from a Mac?












0















I have some files on my external NTFS drive that were copied from a Mac using Paragon NTFS. Back in Windows 7, I'm unable to view said files. I believe they exist because they still occupy space on the drive. Also, I don't currently have access to a Mac.



Here's what I've tried so far :

1. Cygwin/Command-Prompt

Tried "ls -a" and "dir /ah" but it doesn't work.

2. Data recovery software

It detects the folders but it's taking forever to "recover" given that these files haven't been deleted in the first place.



I vaguely recall there being certain commands in Command-Prompt that can force such files to reveal themselves. And then it becomes a matter of simple cut/paste to retrieve them.










share|improve this question























  • It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

    – Milliways
    Feb 16 '14 at 11:36











  • I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 16:22


















0















I have some files on my external NTFS drive that were copied from a Mac using Paragon NTFS. Back in Windows 7, I'm unable to view said files. I believe they exist because they still occupy space on the drive. Also, I don't currently have access to a Mac.



Here's what I've tried so far :

1. Cygwin/Command-Prompt

Tried "ls -a" and "dir /ah" but it doesn't work.

2. Data recovery software

It detects the folders but it's taking forever to "recover" given that these files haven't been deleted in the first place.



I vaguely recall there being certain commands in Command-Prompt that can force such files to reveal themselves. And then it becomes a matter of simple cut/paste to retrieve them.










share|improve this question























  • It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

    – Milliways
    Feb 16 '14 at 11:36











  • I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 16:22
















0












0








0








I have some files on my external NTFS drive that were copied from a Mac using Paragon NTFS. Back in Windows 7, I'm unable to view said files. I believe they exist because they still occupy space on the drive. Also, I don't currently have access to a Mac.



Here's what I've tried so far :

1. Cygwin/Command-Prompt

Tried "ls -a" and "dir /ah" but it doesn't work.

2. Data recovery software

It detects the folders but it's taking forever to "recover" given that these files haven't been deleted in the first place.



I vaguely recall there being certain commands in Command-Prompt that can force such files to reveal themselves. And then it becomes a matter of simple cut/paste to retrieve them.










share|improve this question














I have some files on my external NTFS drive that were copied from a Mac using Paragon NTFS. Back in Windows 7, I'm unable to view said files. I believe they exist because they still occupy space on the drive. Also, I don't currently have access to a Mac.



Here's what I've tried so far :

1. Cygwin/Command-Prompt

Tried "ls -a" and "dir /ah" but it doesn't work.

2. Data recovery software

It detects the folders but it's taking forever to "recover" given that these files haven't been deleted in the first place.



I vaguely recall there being certain commands in Command-Prompt that can force such files to reveal themselves. And then it becomes a matter of simple cut/paste to retrieve them.







macos ntfs data-recovery cygwin cmd.exe






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 16 '14 at 10:37









adiadi

113




113













  • It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

    – Milliways
    Feb 16 '14 at 11:36











  • I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 16:22





















  • It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

    – Milliways
    Feb 16 '14 at 11:36











  • I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 16:22



















It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

– Milliways
Feb 16 '14 at 11:36





It is possible that the files are using alternate data streams to map extended data. I don't remember how to show these in Windows, but you could try looking for ADS.

– Milliways
Feb 16 '14 at 11:36













I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

– adi
Feb 16 '14 at 16:22







I used this but didn't find the folder stored as an alternate stream.

– adi
Feb 16 '14 at 16:22












1 Answer
1






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oldest

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OS X can read NTFS volumes, you just have to enable it.

Here is a site that tells you how it can be done Enable NTFS Read on Mac OS X






share|improve this answer
























  • This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 13:56











  • you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

    – pun
    Feb 16 '14 at 14:06













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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

votes









0














OS X can read NTFS volumes, you just have to enable it.

Here is a site that tells you how it can be done Enable NTFS Read on Mac OS X






share|improve this answer
























  • This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 13:56











  • you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

    – pun
    Feb 16 '14 at 14:06


















0














OS X can read NTFS volumes, you just have to enable it.

Here is a site that tells you how it can be done Enable NTFS Read on Mac OS X






share|improve this answer
























  • This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 13:56











  • you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

    – pun
    Feb 16 '14 at 14:06
















0












0








0







OS X can read NTFS volumes, you just have to enable it.

Here is a site that tells you how it can be done Enable NTFS Read on Mac OS X






share|improve this answer













OS X can read NTFS volumes, you just have to enable it.

Here is a site that tells you how it can be done Enable NTFS Read on Mac OS X







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Feb 16 '14 at 13:47









punpun

4,88581853




4,88581853













  • This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 13:56











  • you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

    – pun
    Feb 16 '14 at 14:06





















  • This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

    – adi
    Feb 16 '14 at 13:56











  • you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

    – pun
    Feb 16 '14 at 14:06



















This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

– adi
Feb 16 '14 at 13:56





This is part of my problem, i.e. I don't have access to a Mac or a computer with OS X installed.

– adi
Feb 16 '14 at 13:56













you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

– pun
Feb 16 '14 at 14:06







you probably need something like HFSExplorer in that case then catacombae.org/hfsx.html

– pun
Feb 16 '14 at 14:06




















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