
The problem occurs anywhere on the partition, not only in the root directory, and for any change in files. Unfortunately, this is the only file available at OS/System Volume Information/Chkdsk. > I think Ubuntu does something wrong when saving files to NTFS partitions,Īnd a possible cause is Microsoft having changed the rules unilaterally. Windows through a "restart" instead of "shut down" ? What does the same command return when you switch to Ubuntu from

(Replace Win by your actual mount point, keep the quotes or escape the '$') Sudo head -c 30 'Win/$LogFile' | tail -c 4 | od -t x2 When you start Ubuntu after having logged off Windows normally, what is the > option in Windows, and Fastboot from BIOS.

> I shut down Windows properly and do not hibernate. Note : this is a UTF16-encoded file, you may have to post it as a binary file. Which you can determine from its time stamp ( at 20:53:12:946). (Replace Win by your actual mount point, use quotes or escape the spaces) > I have been able to find the exact event log concerning this issue in WindowsĪ file has also probably been created in "Win/System Volume Information/Chkdsk" > Whenever I create or copy files to any of the NTFS partitions from Ubuntu, these filesĭoes this also happen to files on external devices (such as a usb key) ? UpgradeStatus: No upgrade log present (probably fresh install) InstallationMedia: Ubuntu 13.10 "Saucy Salamander" - Release amd64 (20131016.1) InstallationDate: Installed on (28 days ago) Since Windows sees the modified files as corrupted files that need repair, I think Ubuntu does something wrong when saving files to NTFS partitions, and it is probably a bug in NTFS-3g. Note: "line-mozart.avi" is the name of the file that got deleted this time. I have been able to find the exact event log concerning this issue in Windows Event Viewer, it says: "The file system structure on volume D: has now been repaired." and in the details section: The same problem occurred when using Linux Mint. I have disabled fast startup option in Windows, and Fastboot from BIOS. I shut down Windows properly and do not hibernate. When I login to Ubuntu again, the files are not there. Whenever I create or copy files to any of the NTFS partitions from Ubuntu, these files get deleted once I login to Windows. I have Ubuntu 13.10 and Windows 8.1 installed, both 64-bit (dual boot).
