Hi...


I am doing a project for converting one file system to another..(FAT
to NTFS as well as NTFS to FAT)...

I am having a complete information regarding the internal architecture
as well as working of both the file systems..

but i havnt been able to find any information on--how to go abt the
CONVERSION mechanism(without the movement of data)???

if ne1 knows,how to convert(complete steps) from FAT32 to NTFS,plz let
me know..a virtual code or steps for CONVERT.EXE???


Thanks..

Lukin 4wrd 4 ur co-operation...

Re: FAT to NTFS by DL

DL
Mon Oct 01 02:13:45 CDT 2007

Windows Help?

"anny" <anuraggarg04@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:1191214872.013462.118480@d55g2000hsg.googlegroups.com...
> Hi...
>
>
> I am doing a project for converting one file system to another..(FAT
> to NTFS as well as NTFS to FAT)...
>
> I am having a complete information regarding the internal architecture
> as well as working of both the file systems..
>
> but i havnt been able to find any information on--how to go abt the
> CONVERSION mechanism(without the movement of data)???
>
> if ne1 knows,how to convert(complete steps) from FAT32 to NTFS,plz let
> me know..a virtual code or steps for CONVERT.EXE???
>
>
> Thanks..
>
> Lukin 4wrd 4 ur co-operation...
>



RE: FAT to NTFS by Milt

Milt
Mon Oct 01 08:02:00 CDT 2007

Anny,

Go to Start/Help and Support and type Convert FAT to NTFS. You should be
able to find the information you need there.

Milt

"anny" wrote:

> Hi...
>
>
> I am doing a project for converting one file system to another..(FAT
> to NTFS as well as NTFS to FAT)...
>
> I am having a complete information regarding the internal architecture
> as well as working of both the file systems..
>
> but i havnt been able to find any information on--how to go abt the
> CONVERSION mechanism(without the movement of data)???
>
> if ne1 knows,how to convert(complete steps) from FAT32 to NTFS,plz let
> me know..a virtual code or steps for CONVERT.EXE???
>
>
> Thanks..
>
> Lukin 4wrd 4 ur co-operation...
>
>

RE: FAT to NTFS by HimanshuDogra

HimanshuDogra
Mon Oct 01 08:39:02 CDT 2007

Hello

for your project please click on the following link, it will give you all
the commands to convert the FAT to NTFS:

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307881

BUT PLZ NOTE: it is not possible to convert from NTFS to FAT file systems.

Regards
Himanshu Dogra
MCSE

Re: FAT to NTFS by Another

Another
Mon Oct 01 09:15:20 CDT 2007

Actually it is possible to convert back from NTFS to FAT but it
requires 3rd party tools such as Acronis Disk Directory or Partition
Magic.

Brian

"Himanshu Dogra" <HimanshuDogra@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:94740A02-F01E-4CFE-8516-9C67614BC949@microsoft.com...
> Hello
>
> for your project please click on the following link, it will give
> you all
> the commands to convert the FAT to NTFS:
>
> http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307881
>
> BUT PLZ NOTE: it is not possible to convert from NTFS to FAT file
> systems.
>
> Regards
> Himanshu Dogra
> MCSE



Re: FAT to NTFS by HimanshuDogra

HimanshuDogra
Mon Oct 01 09:37:01 CDT 2007

Hello

Yes this is right you can convert from NTFS to FAT using the third party
tools ,but this will destroy your data on the same drive.

also when u use the 3rd party software, it will destry the sectors on the
hard drive. I know this I work with microsoft and we have tried there things
practically.

Regards
Himanshu Dogra
MCSE

Re: FAT to NTFS by John

John
Mon Oct 01 09:50:37 CDT 2007



Himanshu Dogra wrote:

> Hello

> ...

> also when u use the 3rd party software, it will destry the sectors on the
> hard drive. I know this I work with microsoft and we have tried there things
> practically.

What are you talking about? Where do you get this information? Using
3rd party partition/disk tools does not destroy disk sectors!

John


Re: FAT to NTFS by Another

Another
Mon Oct 01 10:00:45 CDT 2007

Over the years I've used the 3rd party tools to go back and forth
between FAT and NTFS several times without ever loosing any data.

Brian

"Himanshu Dogra" <HimanshuDogra@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:77BEC41A-E37B-4CAD-95AA-925563E603E9@microsoft.com...
> Hello
>
> Yes this is right you can convert from NTFS to FAT using the third
> party
> tools ,but this will destroy your data on the same drive.
>
> also when u use the 3rd party software, it will destry the sectors
> on the
> hard drive. I know this I work with microsoft and we have tried
> there things
> practically.
>
> Regards
> Himanshu Dogra
> MCSE



Re: FAT to NTFS by Ken

Ken
Mon Oct 01 10:36:47 CDT 2007

On Mon, 1 Oct 2007 07:37:01 -0700, Himanshu Dogra
<HimanshuDogra@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:

> Hello
>
> Yes this is right you can convert from NTFS to FAT using the third party
> tools ,but this will destroy your data on the same drive.
>
> also when u use the 3rd party software, it will destry the sectors on the
> hard drive. I know this I work with microsoft and we have tried there things
> practically.




This is completely false. *Many* people have successfully converted
from NTFS to FAT using 3rd-party tools and without losing anything.

--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup

Re: FAT to NTFS by Ken

Ken
Mon Oct 01 10:35:30 CDT 2007

On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 05:01:12 -0000, anny <anuraggarg04@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi...
>
>
> I am doing a project for converting one file system to another..(FAT
> to NTFS as well as NTFS to FAT)...
>
> I am having a complete information regarding the internal architecture
> as well as working of both the file systems..
>
> but i havnt been able to find any information on--how to go abt the
> CONVERSION mechanism(without the movement of data)???
>
> if ne1 knows,how to convert(complete steps) from FAT32 to NTFS,plz let
> me know..a virtual code or steps for CONVERT.EXE???



To convert to NTFS, you use the CONVERT command. But first read
http://www.aumha.org/a/ntfscvt.htm because there's an issue regarding
cluster size that isn't obvious.

Also note that conversion is a big step, affecting everything on your
drive. When you take such a big step, no matter how unlikely, it is
always possible that something could go wrong. For that reason, it's
prudent to make sure you have a backup of anything you can't afford to
lose before beginning.

--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup