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When a Restore Point is created, Windows starts monitoring the volume and any changes are recorded in a proprietory diff file inside System Volume Information folder.

Thorough VSS-SDK api, we can expose the volume, but it shows us the whole volume and all the files/folders which have or have-not been modified since snapshot creation, and on access to any file, a filter-driver applies the diff, if required, and shows us the file.

My Question: Is it possible to list all the modified files, with respect to a restore point (except the brute-force method to compare each file inside the shadow-volume and the main-volume)?

How does Windows do it when we click on the previous versions tab in a file's Properties?

4 Answers 4

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Make use of the NTFS Change Journal. Windows logs all changes to all files on an NTFS volume in a journal database (if the journal is on). This can be queried to return all changes from a specific start USN number (your restore point)

Here is an article about the journal that helped me a lot while implementing change journal functionality

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  • thanks for the link, would you know how to get the USN number for the restore point? I"m struggling to get this info and have a unanswered question if you have a second? stackoverflow.com/questions/10544433/…
    – stuck
    Jul 23, 2012 at 8:26
  • I've added an answer to your question... Although it may not be exactly what you are looking for ;-) Aug 18, 2012 at 22:58
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To detect changes in the current file system vs a shadow copy, you can use a third party software like WinMerge with the shadow copy UNC paths http://winmerge.org/. This will provide a GUI for comparisons

For example, use "C:\", vs "\localhost\C$\@GMT-2017.08.24-18.07.46"

Of course, enter a valid UNC path to coincide with the date and time of a shadow copy.

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I guess the best way IS brute-force, coupled with USN number-comparison For reference, the link to a similar question is here

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Windows know from the attributes date modified. It compares the the two file and checks the modified date.

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  • The date attributes (all three- creation,modified and access) can be easily modified programatically, so I don't think that's the case.
    – lalli
    Sep 3, 2010 at 3:18

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