Puppy Linux Live CD: “Symbolic Link to Unsupported Reparse Point”

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Here are a few specs:



  1. Windows 10 Pro

  2. Slacko Puppy 6.3

  3. 700 MB CD

  4. 16 GB RAM

  5. 2 TB HDD

Currently, to do some testing, I am running Puppy Linux from a live CD and attempting to access the files on my mounted C drive. I am booting from restart - and not from shutdown - to avoid the fast-boot in Windows 10. However, although most files work fine in terms of renaming, deleting, etc., many files in C:Windows (and everything in C:Windowssystem32) come up as caution symbols with the tool tip "Symbolic Link to Unsupported Reparse Point." I booted back into Windows to check said files and all are fine and aren't corrupted.










share|improve this question




























    0















    Here are a few specs:



    1. Windows 10 Pro

    2. Slacko Puppy 6.3

    3. 700 MB CD

    4. 16 GB RAM

    5. 2 TB HDD

    Currently, to do some testing, I am running Puppy Linux from a live CD and attempting to access the files on my mounted C drive. I am booting from restart - and not from shutdown - to avoid the fast-boot in Windows 10. However, although most files work fine in terms of renaming, deleting, etc., many files in C:Windows (and everything in C:Windowssystem32) come up as caution symbols with the tool tip "Symbolic Link to Unsupported Reparse Point." I booted back into Windows to check said files and all are fine and aren't corrupted.










    share|improve this question


























      0












      0








      0








      Here are a few specs:



      1. Windows 10 Pro

      2. Slacko Puppy 6.3

      3. 700 MB CD

      4. 16 GB RAM

      5. 2 TB HDD

      Currently, to do some testing, I am running Puppy Linux from a live CD and attempting to access the files on my mounted C drive. I am booting from restart - and not from shutdown - to avoid the fast-boot in Windows 10. However, although most files work fine in terms of renaming, deleting, etc., many files in C:Windows (and everything in C:Windowssystem32) come up as caution symbols with the tool tip "Symbolic Link to Unsupported Reparse Point." I booted back into Windows to check said files and all are fine and aren't corrupted.










      share|improve this question
















      Here are a few specs:



      1. Windows 10 Pro

      2. Slacko Puppy 6.3

      3. 700 MB CD

      4. 16 GB RAM

      5. 2 TB HDD

      Currently, to do some testing, I am running Puppy Linux from a live CD and attempting to access the files on my mounted C drive. I am booting from restart - and not from shutdown - to avoid the fast-boot in Windows 10. However, although most files work fine in terms of renaming, deleting, etc., many files in C:Windows (and everything in C:Windowssystem32) come up as caution symbols with the tool tip "Symbolic Link to Unsupported Reparse Point." I booted back into Windows to check said files and all are fine and aren't corrupted.







      mount symlink livecd puppy-linux






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      share|improve this question








      edited Jan 13 at 21:55









      Rui F Ribeiro

      39.7k1479132




      39.7k1479132










      asked Oct 23 '16 at 21:57









      NoxilusNoxilus

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          2 Answers
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          These are files that the Linux NTFS driver can't handle. They could be compressed files, duplicated files, or some other variation on a theme.



          You cannot read them from a Linux based system.



          If you're interested I asked a similar question over on Server Fault a while ago. See Determine target of NTFS reparse point.






          share|improve this answer
































            0














            See how to use ntfs-3g for reading system compressed files from Windows 10 on
            http://jp-andre.pagesperso-orange.fr/compression.html#systemcompression






            share|improve this answer






















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              2 Answers
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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              0














              These are files that the Linux NTFS driver can't handle. They could be compressed files, duplicated files, or some other variation on a theme.



              You cannot read them from a Linux based system.



              If you're interested I asked a similar question over on Server Fault a while ago. See Determine target of NTFS reparse point.






              share|improve this answer





























                0














                These are files that the Linux NTFS driver can't handle. They could be compressed files, duplicated files, or some other variation on a theme.



                You cannot read them from a Linux based system.



                If you're interested I asked a similar question over on Server Fault a while ago. See Determine target of NTFS reparse point.






                share|improve this answer



























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  These are files that the Linux NTFS driver can't handle. They could be compressed files, duplicated files, or some other variation on a theme.



                  You cannot read them from a Linux based system.



                  If you're interested I asked a similar question over on Server Fault a while ago. See Determine target of NTFS reparse point.






                  share|improve this answer















                  These are files that the Linux NTFS driver can't handle. They could be compressed files, duplicated files, or some other variation on a theme.



                  You cannot read them from a Linux based system.



                  If you're interested I asked a similar question over on Server Fault a while ago. See Determine target of NTFS reparse point.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:13









                  Community

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                  answered Oct 23 '16 at 22:14









                  roaimaroaima

                  44k555118




                  44k555118























                      0














                      See how to use ntfs-3g for reading system compressed files from Windows 10 on
                      http://jp-andre.pagesperso-orange.fr/compression.html#systemcompression






                      share|improve this answer



























                        0














                        See how to use ntfs-3g for reading system compressed files from Windows 10 on
                        http://jp-andre.pagesperso-orange.fr/compression.html#systemcompression






                        share|improve this answer

























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          See how to use ntfs-3g for reading system compressed files from Windows 10 on
                          http://jp-andre.pagesperso-orange.fr/compression.html#systemcompression






                          share|improve this answer













                          See how to use ntfs-3g for reading system compressed files from Windows 10 on
                          http://jp-andre.pagesperso-orange.fr/compression.html#systemcompression







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Nov 17 '16 at 11:03









                          EmmanuelEmmanuel

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