How can I detect only deleted, changed, and created files on a volume?
I need to know if there is an easy way of detecting only the files that were deleted, modified or created on an NTFS volume.
I have written a program for offsite backup in C++. After the first backup, I check the arch开发者_StackOverflowive bit of each file to see if there was any change made, and back up only the files that were changed. Also, it backs up from the VSS snapshot in order to prevent file locks.
This seems to work fine on most file systems, but for some with lots of files and directories, this process takes too long and often the backup takes more than a day to finish backing up.
I tried using the change journal to easily detect changes made on an NTFS volume, but the change journal would show a lot of records, most of them relating to small temporary files created and destroyed. Also, I could the file name, file reference number, and the parent file reference number, but I could not get the full file path. The parent file reference number is somehow supposed to give you the parent directory path.
EDIT: This needs to run everyday, so at the beginning of every scan, it should record only the changes that took place since the last scan. Or atleast, there should be a way to say changes since so and so time and date.
You can enumerate all the files on a volume using FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA. This is a fast process (my tests returned better than 6000 records per second even on a very old machine, and 20000+ is more typical) and only includes files that currently exist.
The data returned includes the file flags as well as the USNs so you could check for changes whichever way you prefer.
You will still need to work out the full path for the files by matching the parent IDs with the file IDs of the directories. One approach would be to use a buffer large enough to hold all the file records simultaneously, and search through the records to find the matching parent for each file you need to back up. For large volumes you would probably need to process the directory records into a more efficient data structure, perhaps a hash table.
Alternately, you can read/reread the records for the parent directories as needed. This would be less efficient, but the performance might still be satisfactory depending on how many files are being backed up. Windows does appear to cache the data returned by FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA.
This program searches the C volume for files named test.txt and returns information about any files found, as well as about their parent directories.
#include <Windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#define BUFFER_SIZE (1024 * 1024)
HANDLE drive;
USN maxusn;
void show_record (USN_RECORD * record)
{
void * buffer;
MFT_ENUM_DATA mft_enum_data;
DWORD bytecount = 1;
USN_RECORD * parent_record;
WCHAR * filename;
WCHAR * filenameend;
printf("=================================================================\n");
printf("RecordLength: %u\n", record->RecordLength);
printf("MajorVersion: %u\n", (DWORD)record->MajorVersion);
printf("MinorVersion: %u\n", (DWORD)record->MinorVersion);
printf("FileReferenceNumber: %lu\n", record->FileReferenceNumber);
printf("ParentFRN: %lu\n", record->ParentFileReferenceNumber);
printf("USN: %lu\n", record->Usn);
printf("Timestamp: %lu\n", record->TimeStamp);
printf("Reason: %u\n", record->Reason);
printf("SourceInfo: %u\n", record->SourceInfo);
printf("SecurityId: %u\n", record->SecurityId);
printf("FileAttributes: %x\n", record->FileAttributes);
printf("FileNameLength: %u\n", (DWORD)record->FileNameLength);
filename = (WCHAR *)(((BYTE *)record) + record->FileNameOffset);
filenameend= (WCHAR *)(((BYTE *)record) + record->FileNameOffset + record->FileNameLength);
printf("FileName: %.*ls\n", filenameend - filename, filename);
buffer = VirtualAlloc(NULL, BUFFER_SIZE, MEM_RESERVE | MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE);
if (buffer == NULL)
{
printf("VirtualAlloc: %u\n", GetLastError());
return;
}
mft_enum_data.StartFileReferenceNumber = record->ParentFileReferenceNumber;
mft_enum_data.LowUsn = 0;
mft_enum_data.HighUsn = maxusn;
if (!DeviceIoControl(drive, FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA, &mft_enum_data, sizeof(mft_enum_data), buffer, BUFFER_SIZE, &bytecount, NULL))
{
printf("FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA (show_record): %u\n", GetLastError());
return;
}
parent_record = (USN_RECORD *)((USN *)buffer + 1);
if (parent_record->FileReferenceNumber != record->ParentFileReferenceNumber)
{
printf("=================================================================\n");
printf("Couldn't retrieve FileReferenceNumber %u\n", record->ParentFileReferenceNumber);
return;
}
show_record(parent_record);
}
void check_record(USN_RECORD * record)
{
WCHAR * filename;
WCHAR * filenameend;
filename = (WCHAR *)(((BYTE *)record) + record->FileNameOffset);
filenameend= (WCHAR *)(((BYTE *)record) + record->FileNameOffset + record->FileNameLength);
if (filenameend - filename != 8) return;
if (wcsncmp(filename, L"test.txt", 8) != 0) return;
show_record(record);
}
int main(int argc, char ** argv)
{
MFT_ENUM_DATA mft_enum_data;
DWORD bytecount = 1;
void * buffer;
USN_RECORD * record;
USN_RECORD * recordend;
USN_JOURNAL_DATA * journal;
DWORDLONG nextid;
DWORDLONG filecount = 0;
DWORD starttick, endtick;
starttick = GetTickCount();
printf("Allocating memory.\n");
buffer = VirtualAlloc(NULL, BUFFER_SIZE, MEM_RESERVE | MEM_COMMIT, PAGE_READWRITE);
if (buffer == NULL)
{
printf("VirtualAlloc: %u\n", GetLastError());
return 0;
}
printf("Opening volume.\n");
drive = CreateFile(L"\\\\?\\c:", GENERIC_READ, FILE_SHARE_DELETE | FILE_SHARE_READ | FILE_SHARE_WRITE, NULL, OPEN_ALWAYS, FILE_FLAG_NO_BUFFERING, NULL);
if (drive == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE)
{
printf("CreateFile: %u\n", GetLastError());
return 0;
}
printf("Calling FSCTL_QUERY_USN_JOURNAL\n");
if (!DeviceIoControl(drive, FSCTL_QUERY_USN_JOURNAL, NULL, 0, buffer, BUFFER_SIZE, &bytecount, NULL))
{
printf("FSCTL_QUERY_USN_JOURNAL: %u\n", GetLastError());
return 0;
}
journal = (USN_JOURNAL_DATA *)buffer;
printf("UsnJournalID: %lu\n", journal->UsnJournalID);
printf("FirstUsn: %lu\n", journal->FirstUsn);
printf("NextUsn: %lu\n", journal->NextUsn);
printf("LowestValidUsn: %lu\n", journal->LowestValidUsn);
printf("MaxUsn: %lu\n", journal->MaxUsn);
printf("MaximumSize: %lu\n", journal->MaximumSize);
printf("AllocationDelta: %lu\n", journal->AllocationDelta);
maxusn = journal->MaxUsn;
mft_enum_data.StartFileReferenceNumber = 0;
mft_enum_data.LowUsn = 0;
mft_enum_data.HighUsn = maxusn;
for (;;)
{
// printf("=================================================================\n");
// printf("Calling FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA\n");
if (!DeviceIoControl(drive, FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA, &mft_enum_data, sizeof(mft_enum_data), buffer, BUFFER_SIZE, &bytecount, NULL))
{
printf("=================================================================\n");
printf("FSCTL_ENUM_USN_DATA: %u\n", GetLastError());
printf("Final ID: %lu\n", nextid);
printf("File count: %lu\n", filecount);
endtick = GetTickCount();
printf("Ticks: %u\n", endtick - starttick);
return 0;
}
// printf("Bytes returned: %u\n", bytecount);
nextid = *((DWORDLONG *)buffer);
// printf("Next ID: %lu\n", nextid);
record = (USN_RECORD *)((USN *)buffer + 1);
recordend = (USN_RECORD *)(((BYTE *)buffer) + bytecount);
while (record < recordend)
{
filecount++;
check_record(record);
record = (USN_RECORD *)(((BYTE *)record) + record->RecordLength);
}
mft_enum_data.StartFileReferenceNumber = nextid;
}
}
Additional notes
As discussed in the comments, you may need to replace
MFT_ENUM_DATA
withMFT_ENUM_DATA_V0
on versions of Windows later than Windows 7. (This may also depend on what compiler and SDK you are using.)I'm printing the 64-bit file reference numbers as if they were 32-bit. That was just a mistake on my part. Probably in production code you won't be printing them anyway, but FYI.
The change journal is your best bet. You can use the file reference numbers to match file creation/deletion pairs and thus ignore temporary files, without having to process them any further.
I think you have to scan the Master File Table to make sense of ParentFileReferenceNumber. Of course you only need to keep track of directories when doing this, and use a data structure that will allow you to quickly lookup the information, so you only need to scan the MFT once.
You can use ReadDirectoryChanges and surrounding windows API.
I know how to achieve this in java. It will help you if you implement Java code inside C++.
In Java you can achieve this using Jnotify
API.It looks for changes in sub-directory also.
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