IST 454 Quiz 4

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Master File Table (MFT)

NTFS uses this database to store and link to files. It contains information about access rights, date and time stamps, system attributes, and other information about files.

Master Boot Record (MBR)

On Windows and DOS computers, this boot disk file contains information about partitions on a disk and their locations, size, and other important items.

UTF-8 (Unicode Transformation Format)

One of three formats Unicode uses to translate languages for digital representation.

Unallocated disk space

Partition disk space that isn't allocated to a file. This space might contain data from files that have been deleted previously.

Virtual hard disk (VHD)

A file representing a system's hard drive that can be booted in a virtualization application and allows running a suspect's computer in a virtual environment.

Partition

A logical drive on a disk. It can be the entire disk or part of the disk.

Recovery certificate

A method NTFS uses so that a network administrator can recover encrypted files if the file's user/creator loses the private key encryption code.

Head and cylinder skew

A method manufacturers use to minimize lag time. The starting sectors of tracks are slightly offset from each other to move the read-write head.

Resilient File System (ReFS)

A new file system developed for Windows Server 2012. It allows increased scalability for disk storage and improved features for data recovery and error checking.

One-time passphrase

A password used to access special accounts or programs requiring a high level of security, such as a decryption utility for an encrypted drive. This passphrase can be used only once, and then it expires.

NT Loader (Ntldr)

A program located in the root folder of the system partition that loads the OS. See also BootSect.dos.

Encrypting File System (EFS)

A public/private key encryption first used in Windows 2000 on NTFS-formatted disks. The file is encrypted with a symmetric key, and then a public/private key is used to encrypt the symmetric key.

Sector

A section on a track, typically made up of 512 bytes.

American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII)

An 8-bit coding scheme that assigns numeric values to up to 256 characters, including letters, numerals, punctuation marks, control characters, and other symbols.

Wear-leveling

An internal firmware feature used in solid-state drives that ensures even wear of read/writes for all memory cells.

Personal identity information (PII)

Any information that can be used to create bank or credit card accounts, such as name, home address, Social Security number, and driver's license number.

Data runs

Cluster addresses where files are stored on a drive's partition outside the MFT record. They are used for nonresident MFT file records. This field consists of three components; the first component defines the size in bytes needed to store the second and third components' content.

Tracks

Concentric circles on a disk platter where data is stored.

Public key

In encryption, the key used to encrypt a file; it's held by a certificate authority, such as a global registry, network server, or company such as VeriSign.

Bootstrap process

Information contained in ROM that a computer accesses during startup; this information tells the computer how to access the OS and hard drive.

Geometry

A disk drive's internal organization of platters, tracks, and sectors.

Registry

A Windows database containing information about hardware and software configurations, network connections, user preferences, setup information, and other critical information.

ISO image

A bootable file that can be copied to CD or DVD; typically used for installing operating systems. It can also be read by virtualization software when creating a virtual boot disk.

Unicode

A character code representation that's replacing ASCII. It's capable of representing more than 64,000 characters and non-European-based languages.

Cylinder

A column of tracks on two or more disk platters.

Virtual machines

Emulated computer environments that simulate hardware and can be used for running OSs separate from the physical (host) computer. For example, a computer running Windows Vista could have a virtual Windows 98 OS, allowing the user to switch between OSs.

Device drivers

Files containing instructions for the OS for hardware devices, such as the keyboard, mouse, and video card.

Attribute ID

In NTFS, an MFT record field containing metadata about the file or folder and the file's data or links to the file's data.

Metadata

In NTFS, this term refers to information stored in the MFT. See also Master File Table (MFT).

Private key

In encryption, the key used to decrypt the file. The file owner keeps this key.

Clusters

Storage allocation units composed of groups of sectors. They are 512, 1024, 2048, or 4096 bytes each.

Physical addresses

The actual sectors in which files are located. Sectors reside at the hardware and firmware level.

Head

The device that reads and writes data to a disk drive.

High Performance File System (HPFS)

The file system IBM uses for its OS/2 operating system. Info2 file In Windows NT through Vista, the control file for the Recycle Bin. It contains ASCII data, Unicode data, and date and time of deletion.

NT File System (NTFS)

The file system Microsoft created to replace FAT. It uses security features, allows smaller cluster sizes, and uses Unicode, which makes it a more versatile system. It is used mainly on newer OSs, starting with Windows NT.

Partition Boot Sector

The first data set of an NTFS disk. It starts at sector [0] of the disk drive and can expand up to 16 sectors.

Zone bit recording (ZBR)

The method most manufacturers use to deal with a platter's inner tracks being shorter than the outer tracks. Grouping tracks by zones ensures that all tracks hold the same amount of data.

Areal density

The number of bits per square inch of a disk platter.

Logical cluster numbers (LCNs)

The numbers sequentially assigned to each cluster when an NTFS disk partition is created and formatted. The first cluster on an NTFS partition starts at count 0. LCNs become the addresses that allow the MFT to read and write data to the disk's nonresident attribute area. See also data runs and virtual cluster number (VCN).

File Allocation Table (FAT)

The original Microsoft file structure database. It's written to the outermost track of a disk and contains information about each file stored on the drive. PCs use the FAT to organize files on a disk so that the OS can find the files it needs. The variations are FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, VFAT, and FATX.

Track density

The space between tracks on a disk. The smaller the space between tracks, the more tracks on a disk. Older drives with wider track densities allowed the heads to wander.

RAM slack

The unused space between the end of the file (EOF) and the end of the last sector used by the active file in the cluster. Any data residing in RAM at the time the file is saved, such as logon IDs and passwords, can appear in this area, whether the information was saved or not. This is found mainly in older Microsoft OSs.

File slack

The unused space created when a file is saved. If the allocated space is larger than the file, the remaining space is slack space and can contain passwords, logon IDs, file fragments, and deleted e-mails.

File system

The way files are stored on a disk; gives an OS a road map to data on a disk.

Drive slack

Unused space in a cluster between the end of an active file and the end of the cluster. It can contain deleted files, deleted e-mail, or file fragments. It is made up of both file slack and RAM slack.

Partition gap

Unused space or void between the primary partition and the first logical partition.

Alternate data streams

Ways in which data can be appended to a file (intentionally or not) and potentially obscure evidentiary data. In NTFS, these become an additional file attribute.

Virtual cluster numbers (VCN)

When a large file is saved in NTFS, it's assigned a logical cluster number specifying a location on the partition. Large files are referred to as nonresident files. If the disk is highly fragmented, VCNs are assigned and list the additional space needed to store the file. The LCN is a physical location on the NTFS partition; VCNs are the offset from the previous LCN data run.

Logical addresses

When files are saved, they are assigned to clusters, which the OS numbers sequentially starting at 2. These point to relative cluster positions, using these assigned cluster numbers.


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