-Case #1 - All packages installed:
- captive-install - Acquire needed MS-Windows drivers and setup /etc/fstab.
- captive-lufs - Linux User File System module driver to be native filesystem.
- captive - Base package of this project.
- lufs >=0.9.6-1captive - Linux User File System engine for captive-lufs.
- gnome-vfs-httpcaptive - Gnome-VFS httpcaptive:// method for captive-install.
- ntfsprogs >=200309071734 - Readonly NTFS to get drivers by captive-install.
- ntfsprogs-gnomevfs - Gnome-VFS readonly NTFS access used by captive-install.
-
- Required W32 drivers were automatically found if Microsoft Windows XP is
- installed on any (mounted or unmounted) NTFS or (mounted) FAT partition.
- You may want to run captive-install-acquire(1) to check the drivers state
- and possibly update them. Installer uses X Windows or console automatically.
-
- Any NTFS disk partitions were automatically added to /etc/fstab.
- These partitions are now available for mount by
- mount /mnt/captive-DISK_LABEL
- such as (if the label is empty)
- mount /mnt/captive-
+Required W32 drivers were automatically found if Microsoft Windows XP is
+installed on any NTFS or FAT partitions. FAT partitions must be already
+mounted. You may want to run captive-install-acquire(1) to check the drivers
+state and possibly update them. Installer uses X Windows or console
+automatically.
+
+Any NTFS disk partitions were automatically added to /etc/fstab.
+These partitions are now available for mount by
+ mount /mnt/captive-DISK_LABEL
+
+NTFS disk drives can be also mounted by
+ mkdir /mnt/drive-c
+ mount -t captive-ntfs /dev/hda1 /mnt/drive-c
+
+
+If you do not use the captive-install-acquire(1) installer you may also
+copy the drivers yourself - at least "ntoskrnl.exe" and "ntfs.sys".
+They should be stored in '/var/lib/captive' directory (lowercased filenames).
+These driver must be from Microsoft Windows XP while
+Service Pack 1 Check Build U.S. is their preferred version:
+ http://www.microsoft.com/WindowsXP/pro/downloads/servicepacks/sp1/checkedbuild.asp
+
+
+Command-line client access only:
+
+NTFS disk drives can be also accessed without Linux kernel support by:
+ captive-cmdline \
+ --load-module=/var/lib/captive/ntoskrnl.exe \
+ --filesystem=/var/lib/captive/ntfs.sys \
+ --sandbox-server=/usr/sbin/captive-sandbox-server \
+ --bug-pathname=/tmp/captive-bug-%FT%T.captivebug.xml.gz \
+ --disk --rw /dev/hda1
+ (Backslash end-of-line characters '\' to be omitted for line continuation.)
+
+In the case of 'sandbox' invocation error it can be also run directly but
+read/write (--rw) mode is definitely discouraged in such case:
+ captive-cmdline \
+ --load-module=/var/lib/captive/ntoskrnl.exe \
+ --filesystem=/var/lib/captive/ntfs.sys \
+ --disk --rw /dev/hda1
+ (Backslash end-of-line characters '\' to be omitted for line continuation.)
+
+
+Gnome-VFS aware applications can access NTFS disk drives by:
+ gnomevfs-info file:///dev/hda1#captive-ntfs:/config.sys
+ gnomevfs-copy file:///dev/hda1#captive-ntfs:/config.sys /tmp/
+You can replace 'captive-ntfs' by other supported methods, see:
+ /etc/gnome-vfs-2.0/modules/captive.conf
+
+(Gnome-VFS client is not contained in 'captive-static' package.)