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Today I have seen this weird magic NTFS system supports: each file can have multiple data streams. Basically one could have a file a.txt of 0b size but there can be any number of bytes hidden in a separate data stream for that file. This is strictly NTFS related magic and I don't see any noble reason for having these streams around. You can look for NTFS streams with the help of the streams utility from Sysinternals. This will show you that basically every one of those nasty thumbs.db files comes with an extra data stream.

Okay, now I have seen this magic work on a Windows NT4 system, streams added to files, copied over, deleted (with the help of the aforementioned utility), but I am now trying this at home on my Win XP system, but although I can detect the existing streams, I can't display their contents, can't create new ones, or very much anything when I use the filename:streamname syntax.

I get this error:

The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.

Example: Output from the streams utility:

c:\DOWNLOADS>streams.exe -s .

Streams v1.56 - Enumerate alternate NTFS data streams
Copyright (C) 1999-2007 Mark Russinovich
Sysinternals - www.sysinternals.com

c:\DOWNLOADS\1013.pdf:
   :Zone.Identifier:$DATA       46

c:\DOWNLOADS>type 1013.pdf:Zone.Identifier
The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.

Why can't I display the contents of the alternate data stream?

Looking at the Microsoft documentation on "How To Use NTFS Alternate Data Streams", I can see that this applies to my operating system, although they do mention that these streams will not be supported in the future. Anyone can shed any light on this?

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It says that alternate streams may not be supported in future file systems (i.e. those that come after NTFS), however it says that NTFS will be supported in future OSes regardless. – Pavel Minaev Nov 27 '09 at 17:15
I agree with that. So, as long as my fs is NTFS, I should be able to work with these streams. Do I need a special version of copy program to support copying data from and into alternate streams? – Peter Perháč Nov 27 '09 at 23:32
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5 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

From the top of my head: NTFS datastreams were introduced in Windows NT 3.1 and have been around in all descendants (excluding the win-95 descendants: 98, Me). In XP and Vista they're still around. As long as Windows versions support NTFS, they will support file streams. They will support NTFS for a long time to come.

The datastreams are described in excruciating detail in Windows NT File Systems Internals (O'Reilly), in case you'd be interested.

The error you have is described on the page you show in your question. The type command doesn't understand streams. Use:

more < 1013.pdf:Zone.Identifier

Update: removed some factual errors, added possible solution


EDIT: working with streams

Streams will only work with programs that are designed to work with them, simply because they need to be treated specially (compare junction points, also a feature of NTFS, but the driver hides the details and programs do not need to do anything special: they just consider the junction point a real file).

When you try to open a file stream and a program says something like "illegal filename" or "file not found", and you are positive that the stream name is correct, then it's likely that the program does not support streams. I'm not sure which Microsoft programs work correctly with them, but there are only a few. Here are some experiments you may try.

NOTE: you seem to consider alternate data streams odd. They are odd because they are so hidden, but many major file system (HFS, NSS) have it (and EXT3 comes with extended attributes, which is not the same, but similar) and the concept dates back to the early 80s.

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funny thing is I have seen it work with the type command. However the shell used to demonstrate this was NT4 shell, not the usual cmd.exe – Peter Perháč Nov 27 '09 at 23:25
copy 1013.pdf:Zone.Identifier x.xxx should work too. but it doesn't on my machine. I just don't understand what's going on. – Peter Perháč Nov 27 '09 at 23:30
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BTW, you can open AltDataStream with notepad:

notepad.exe 1013.pdf:Zone.Identifier

Also, you may specify type of AltDataStream (not only with Notepad, it is 'full stream name'):

1013.pdf:Zone.Identifier:$DATA
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notepad.exe seems to have no problems opening the ADS. – Peter Perháč Nov 30 '09 at 13:36
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This is strictly NTFS related magic

Not so - Mac OS has had these since back in the day, they are called forks in that world, and you would use ResEdit to get at them. The classic use of them is to bundle media assets along with an executable.

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Indeed. Microsoft used alternate streams to store Mac forks in their NT Server Services for Macintosh package. – bobbogo Jan 20 '11 at 13:14
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One possible purpose for alternate stream: meta-data. One can add, for a document, a large description without affecting the content of the original file.

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The error literally means that it is not being recognized as an alternate data stream and the reference you're making contains a certain character that is not allowed in a path name (the :; other characters not allowed include \\,/, etc).

Try:

start this_is_a.txt:ads.exe

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Note: Windows 7 has silently removed the ability to execute from ADS and I'm still looking for a way to actually do that. – josmh May 19 '11 at 19:51
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