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UNIVERSAL DATA ACCESS
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With UFS Explorer, you may access your data, located on most used
physical and virtual storages:
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Physical hard disk drives, including healthy and broken RAID arrays; |
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USB mass storage devices, including digital cameras, MP3 players etc.; |
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Virtual disks of Parallels, VMWare and Microsoft Virtual PC virtualization software; |
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Saved RAW disk and partition image files, including compressed disk and partition image files in UFS Explorer internal format. |
Now you should not waste much time to search a tool for every case: UFS Explorer embeds all these solutions into one application. Full set of program features is available for all supported storages.
And after you open your storage, you should not care anymore what is it.
UFS Explorer will detect your file systems, not depending of disk partitioning type. It supports all most used types of disk partitioning:
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Basic, also known as DOS-style (usual for DOS and Windows); |
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Microsoft Dynamic disks, also known as LDM database-based or Microsoft software RAID (they might be used with Windows 2000/XP and later); |
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FreeBSD/OpenBSD/NetBSD slices; |
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Sun Solaris slices; |
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Apple MacOS disk partition maps; |
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GUID-based partitions (GPT); |
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Novell partition and volume descriptors; |
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Physical storages of LVM (logical storages are not supported); |
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No partitions at all: for Linux/BSD storage-wide file systems or disk partition image files. |
With UFS Explorer you can access your data, located on present or lost file systems of different Operation Systems:
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Windows: NTFS, NTFS5 and FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, TFAT32 with Long File Names (LFN); |
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FreeBSD/NetBSD/OpenBSD: UFS and UFS2, known also as Fast File System (FFS); |
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Linux: Ext2, Ext3, XFS and ReiserFS; |
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MacOS X: Old HFS, HFS+, HFSX and byte-swapped UFS/UFS2; |
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Sun Solaris/Unix: UFS; |
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SnapOS: custom SnapOS UFS; |
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Novell Netware: NWFS; |
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Other OS: Both UFS/UFS2 and byte-swapped UFS/UFS2; cross-platform XFS; |
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CD/DVD: ISO9660 with Joliet and UDF on CD/DVD image files (.iso, .mdf...). |
Accessing present or lost files, you should not care if some file is locked by operation system: UFS Explorer uses direct disk access, so it may copy locked file to other place on your drive. You may use this feature, for example, for log files analysis in case if such files are normally locked with no shared access allowed.
You should not worry about file names characters encoding: UFS Explorer fully supports Unicode in all supported Unicode file systems and makes transparent Unicode conversion for non-Unicode file systems.
Does UFS Explorer not support file system or storage you need? Contact us, tell your needs and help us to improve it!
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