Ntfs2btrfs 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. The original image is saved as a reflink copy at
image/ntfs.img
, and if you want to keep the conversion you can delete
this to free up space.
Although I believe this tool to be stable, please note that I take no responsibility if something goes awry!
You're probably also interested in WinBtrfs, which is a Btrfs filesystem driver for Windows.
On Windows, from an Administrator command prompt:
ntfs2btrfs.exe D:\
Bear in mind that it won't work with your boot drive or a drive with a pagefile on it.
On Linux, as root:
ntfs2btrfs /dev/sda1
On Windows, go to the Releases page and download the latest Zip file.
For Linux:
- Arch (thanks to nicman23)
- Gentoo ebuild
For other distributions or operating systems, you will need to compile it yourself - see below.
-
20201108
- Improved error handling
- Added better message if NTFS is corrupted or unclean
- Better handling of relocations
-
20200330
- Initial release
On Windows, open the source directory in a recent version of MSVC, right-click on CMakeLists.txt, and click Compile.
On Linux:
cmake .
make
You'll also need libfmt installed - it should be in your package manager.
- Files
- Directories
- Symlinks
- Other reparse points
- Security descriptors
- Alternate data streams
- DOS attributes (hidden, system, etc.)
- Rollback to original NTFS image
- Windows' old extended attributes (you're not using these)
- Large (i.e >16KB) ADSes (you're not using these either)
- Preservation of LXSS metadata
- Preservation of the case-sensitivity flag
- Unusual cluster sizes (i.e. not 4 KB)
- Compressed files (skipped for now)
- Encrypted files
- "WofCompressedData" (see https://devblogs.microsoft.com/oldnewthing/20190618-00/?p=102597)
Yes, if the stars are right. See Quibble.