Windows NT supports compression on an individual file basis for NTFS volumes. Files that are compressed on an NTFS volume can be read and written by any Windows-based application without first being decompressed by another program. Uncompression happens automatically during the read of the file. The file is compressed again when it is closed or explicitly saved.
Compressed files and folders have an attribute of C when viewed in My Computer or Windows NT Explorer. You can select an alternate color for compressed files and folders by:
Only the NTFS file system can read the compressed form of the data. When an application like Microsoft Word for Windows or an operating system command like Copy requests access to the file, the NTFS file system uncompresses the file before making it available. For example, if you copy a compressed file from a another Windows NT computer to a compressed folder on your hard disk, the file will be uncompressed, copied, and recompressed.
This compression algorithm is similar to that provided by the MS-DOS 6.0 DoubleSpaceâ and MS-DOS 6.22 DriveSpaceä compression, with one important difference — the MS-DOS functionality compresses the entire volume, while the NTFS file system enables the user to compress individual files and folders in the NTFS volume.
NTFS compression is not supported for cluster sizes larger than 4K, because
Therefore, you should not use compression and large clusters at the same time. In other words, compression performs reasonably well on sizes up to 4K, but beyond that size, the savings in disk space is not worth the decrease in performance. When the cluster size is >4K on an NTFS volume, none of the NTFS compression functions are available.
Other compression utilities are available to compress files on computers running Windows NT. These utilities differ from NTFS compression in the following ways:
The Windows NT Server Resource Kit includes a compress program and an expand program. These compress program can only be run from the command line. The expand program is a Windows-based application. There is also an expand program on the Windows NT Server product CD, which you need to run from the command line. For more information about these utilities, see "File System Utilities" in Chapter 10, "Disk, File System, and Backup Utilities."
As described earlier, the DoubleSpace and DriveSpace compression features in MS-DOS cannot be used when running Windows NT.