An 8.3 filename[1] (also called a short filename or SFN) is a filename convention used by old versions of DOS and versions of Microsoft Windows prior to Windows 95 and Windows NT 3.5. It is also used in modern Microsoft operating systems as an alternate filename to the long filename for compatibility with legacy programs. The filename convention is limited by the FAT file system. Similar 8.3 file naming schemes have also existed on earlier CP/M, TRS-80, Atari, and some Data General and Digital Equipment Corporation minicomputer operating systems.
8.3 filenames are limited to at most eight characters (after any directory specifier), followed optionally by a filename extension consisting of a period .
and at most three further characters. For systems that only support 8.3 filenames, excess characters are ignored. If a file name has no extension, a trailing .
has no significance (that is, myfile
and myfile.
are equivalent). Furthermore, file and directory names are uppercase in this system, even though systems that use the 8.3 standard are usually case-insensitive (making CamelCap.tpu
equivalent to the name CAMELCAP.TPU
). However, on non-8.3 operating systems (such as almost any modern operating system) accessing 8.3 file systems (including DOS-formatted diskettes, but also including some modern memory cards and networked file systems), the underlying system may alter filenames internally to preserve case and avoid truncating letters in the names, for example in the case of VFAT.
VFAT, a variant of FAT with an extended directory format, was introduced in Windows 95 and Windows NT 3.5. It allowed mixed-case Unicode long filenames (LFNs) in addition to classic 8.3 names by using multiple 32-byte directory entry records for long filenames (in such a way that only one will be recognised by old 8.3 system software as a valid directory entry).
To maintain backward-compatibility with legacy applications (on DOS and Windows 3.1), on FAT and VFAT filesystems an 8.3 filename is automatically generated for every LFN, through which the file can still be renamed, deleted or opened, although the generated name (e.g. OVI3KV~N
) may show little similarity to the original. On NTFS filesystems the generation of 8.3 filenames can be turned off.[2] The 8.3 filename can be obtained using the Kernel32.dll function GetShortPathName.[3][4]
Although there is no compulsory algorithm for creating the 8.3 name from an LFN, Windows uses the following convention:[5]
TEXTFILE.TXT
TextFile.Txt
becomes TEXTFILE.TXT
..
the leading periods are removed. Other characters such as +
are changed to the underscore _
, and letters are put in uppercase. The stripped name is then truncated to the first 6 letters of its basename, followed by a tilde, followed by a single digit, followed by a period .
, followed by the first 3 characters of the extension.
TextFile.Mine.txt
becomes TEXTFI~1.TXT
(or TEXTFI~2.TXT
, should TEXTFI~1.TXT
already exist). ver +1.2.text
becomes VER_12~1.TEX
. .bashrc.swp
becomes BASHRC~1.SWP
.
, followed by the first 3 characters of the extension.
TextFile.Mine.txt
becomes TE021F~1.TXT
.~1
through ~9
suffixes aren't enough to resolve the collision), the name is further truncated to 5 letters, followed by a tilde, followed by two digits starting from 10, followed by a period .
and the first 3 characters of the extension.
TextFile.Mine.txt
becomes TEXTF~10.TXT
if TEXTFI~1.TXT
through TEXTFI~9.TXT
all exist already.NTFS, a file system used by the Windows NT family, supports LFNs natively, but 8.3 names are still available for legacy applications. This can optionally be disabled to improve performance in situations where large numbers of similarly named files exist in the same folder.[2]
The ISO 9660 file system (mainly used on compact discs) has similar limitations at the most basic Level 1, with the additional restriction that directory names cannot contain extensions and that some characters (notably hyphens) are not allowed in filenames. Level 2 allows filenames of up to 31 characters, more compatible with classic AmigaOS and classic Mac OS filenames.
During the 2001 Microsoft antitrust case, the names MICROS~1 and MICROS~2 were humorously used to refer to the companies that might exist after a proposed split of Microsoft.[6]
This legacy technology is used in a wide range of products and devices, as a standard for interchanging information, such as compact flash cards used in cameras. VFAT LFN long filenames introduced by Windows 95/98/ME retained compatibility. But the VFAT LFN used on NT-based systems (Windows NT/2K/XP) uses a modified 8.3 shortname.
If a filename contains only lowercase letters, or is a combination of a lowercase basename with an uppercase extension, or vice versa; and has no special characters, and fits within the 8.3 limits, a VFAT entry is not created on Windows NT and later versions such as XP. Instead, two bits in byte 0x0c of the directory entry are used to indicate that the filename should be considered as entirely or partially lowercase. Specifically, bit 4 means lowercase extension and bit 3 lowercase basename, which allows for combinations such as example.TXT
or HELLO.txt
but not Mixed.txt
. Few other operating systems support this. This creates a backward-compatibility filename mangling problem with older Windows versions (95, 98, ME) that see all-uppercase filenames if this extension has been used, and therefore can change the capitalization of a file when it is transported, such as on a USB flash drive. This can cause problems for operating systems that do not exhibit the case-insensitive filename behavior as DOS and Windows do. Current (>2.6[citation needed]) versions of Linux will recognize this extension when reading;[7] the mount option shortname determines whether this feature is used when writing.[8]
For MS-DOS you may use Henrik Haftmann's DOSLFN.[9]
A directory table is a special type of file that represents a directory. Each file or directory stored within it is represented by a 32-byte entry in the table. Each entry records the name, extension, attributes (archive, directory, hidden, read-only, system and volume), the date and time of creation, the address of the first cluster of the file/directory's data and finally the size of the file/directory.
Legal characters for DOS filenames include the following:
A
–Z
0
–9
""
...""
) when viewed as a variable within the program building the DOS command.)!
, #
, $
, %
, &
, '
, (
, )
, -
, @
, ^
, _
, `
, {
, }
, ~
This excludes the following ASCII characters:
"
, *
, +
, ,
, /
, :
, ;
, <
, =
, >
, ?
, \
, [
, ]
, |
[10].
(U+002E . FULL STOP) within name and extension fields, except in .
and ..
entries (see below)a
–z
, stored as A
–Z
on FAT12/FAT16The DOS filenames are in the OEM character set. Code 0xE5 as the first byte (see below) makes troubles when extra-ASCII characters are used.
Directory entries, both in the Root Directory Region and in subdirectories, are of the following format:
Byte Offset | Length | Description | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0x00 | 8 | DOS filename (padded with spaces)
The first byte can have the following special values:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x08 | 3 | DOS file extension (padded with spaces, may be empty) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0b | 1 | File Attributes
The first byte can have the following special values:
An attribute value of 0x0F is used to designate a long filename entry. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0c | 1 | Reserved; two bits are used by NT and later versions to encode case information | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0d | 1 | Create time, fine resolution: 10 ms units, values from 0 to 199. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0e | 2 | Create time. The hour, minute and second are encoded according to the following bitmap:
Note that the seconds is recorded only to a 2 second resolution. Finer resolution for file creation is found at offset 0x0d. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x10 | 2 | Create date. The year, month and day are encoded according to the following bitmap:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x12 | 2 | Last access date; see offset 0x10 for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x14 | 2 | EA-Index (used by OS/2 and NT) in FAT12 and FAT16, High 2 bytes of first cluster number in FAT32 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x16 | 2 | Last modified time; see offset 0x0e for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x18 | 2 | Last modified date; see offset 0x10 for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x1a | 2 | First cluster in FAT12 and FAT16. Low 2 bytes of first cluster in FAT32. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x1c | 4 | File size |
Sometimes it may be desirable to convert a long filename to a short filename, for example when working with the command prompt. A few simple rules can be followed to attain the correct 8.3 filename.
~
as the seventh character and a number (usually 1) as the eighth. The number distinguishes it from other files with both the same first six letters and the same extension.To find out for sure the SFN or 8.3 names of the files in a directory
use: dir /x
shows the short names if there is one, and the long names.
or: dir /-n
shows only the short names, in the original DIR listing format.
In Windows NT-based operating systems, command prompt (cmd.exe) applets accept long filenames with wildcard characters (question mark ?
and asterisk *
); long filenames with spaces in them need to be escaped (i.e. enclosed in single or double quotes).[11]
Starting with Windows Vista, console commands and PowerShell applets perform limited pattern matching by allowing wildcards in filename and each subdirectory in the file path and silently substituting the first matching directory entry (for example, C:\>CD \prog*\inter*
will change the current directory to C:\Program Files\Internet Explorer\
).
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 19:12:19
Source: Wikipedia.org