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2011.03.17 13:34

NTFS 파티션 부트섹터

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Partition Boot Sector

Figure 5-1 Formatted NTFS Volume

 

Table 5-1 describes the boot sector of a volume formatted with NTFS. When you format an NTFS volume, the format program allocates the first 16 sectors for the $Boot metadata file. First sector, in fact, is a boot sector with a "bootstrap" code and the following 15 sectors are the boot sector's IPL (initial program loader). To increase file system reliability the very last sector an NTFS partition contains a spare copy of the boot sector.

Table 5-1 NTFS Boot Sector

Byte Offset

Field Length

Field Name

0x00

3 bytes

Jump Instruction

0x03

LONGLONG

OEM ID

0x0B

25 bytes

BPB

0x24

48 bytes

Extended BPB

0x54

426 bytes

Bootstrap Code

0x01FE

WORD

End of Sector Marker

On NTFS volumes, the data fields that follow the BPB form an extended BPB. The data in these fields enables Ntldr (NT loader program) to find the master file table (MFT) during startup. On NTFS volumes, the MFT is not located in a predefined sector, as on FAT16 and FAT32 volumes. For this reason, the MFT can be moved if there is a bad sector in its normal location. However, if the data is corrupted, the MFT cannot be located, and Windows NT/2000 assumes that the volume has not been formatted.

The following example illustrates the boot sector of an NTFS volume formatted while running Windows 2000. The printout is formatted in three sections:

  • Bytes 0x00- 0x0A are the jump instruction and the OEM ID (shown in bold print).
  • Bytes 0x0B-0x53 are the BPB and the extended BPB.
  • The remaining code is the bootstrap code and the end of sector marker (shown in bold print).
Physical Sector:Cyl 0, Side 1, Sector 1 
      00000000:EB 52 90 4E 54 46 53 20 -20 20 20 00 02 08 00 00 .R.NTFS ........ 
      00000010:00 00 00 00 00 F8 00 00 -3F 00 FF 00 3F 00 00 00 ........?...?... 
      00000020:00 00 00 00 80 00 80 00 -4A F5 7F 00 00 00 00 00 ........J....... 
      00000030:04 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 -54 FF 07 00 00 00 00 00 ........T....... 
      00000040:F6 00 00 00 01 00 00 00 -14 A5 1B 74 C9 1B 74 1C ...........t..t. 
      00000050:00 00 00 00 FA 33 C0 8E -D0 BC 00 7C FB B8 C0 07 .....3.....|.... 
      00000060:8E D8 E8 16 00 B8 00 0D -8E C0 33 DB C6 06 0E 00 ..........3..... 
      00000070:10 E8 53 00 68 00 0D 68 -6A 02 CB 8A 16 24 00 B4 ..S.h..hj....$.. 
      00000080:08 CD 13 73 05 B9 FF FF -8A F1 66 0F B6 C6 40 66 ...s......f...@f 
      00000090:0F B6 D1 80 E2 3F F7 E2 -86 CD C0 ED 06 41 66 0F .....?.......Af. 
      000000A0:B7 C9 66 F7 E1 66 A3 20 -00 C3 B4 41 BB AA 55 8A ..f..f....A..U. 
      000000B0:16 24 00 CD 13 72 0F 81 -FB 55 AA 75 09 F6 C1 01 .$...r...U.u.... 
      000000C0:74 04 FE 06 14 00 C3 66 -60 1E 06 66 A1 10 00 66 t......f`..f...f 
      000000D0:03 06 1C 00 66 3B 06 20 -00 0F 82 3A 00 1E 66 6A ....f;....:..fj 
      000000E0:00 66 50 06 53 66 68 10 -00 01 00 80 3E 14 00 00 .fP.Sfh.....>... 
      000000F0:0F 85 0C 00 E8 B3 FF 80 -3E 14 00 00 0F 84 61 00 ........>.....a. 
      00000100:B4 42 8A 16 24 00 16 1F -8B F4 CD 13 66 58 5B 07 .B..$......fX [.. 
      00000110:66 58 66 58 1F EB 2D 66 -33 D2 66 0F B7 0E 18 00 fXfX.-f3.f...... 
      00000120:66 F7 F1 FE C2 8A CA 66 -8B D0 66 C1 EA 10 F7 36 f......f..f....6
      00000130:1A 00 86 D6 8A 16 24 00 -8A E8 C0 E4 06 0A CC B8 ......$......... 
      00000140:01 02 CD 13 0F 82 19 00 -8C C0 05 20 00 8E C0 66 ..............f 
      00000150:FF 06 10 00 FF 0E 0E 00 -0F 85 6F FF 07 1F 66 61 ..........o...fa 
      00000160:C3 A0 F8 01 E8 09 00 A0 -FB 01 E8 03 00 FB EB FE ................ 
      00000170:B4 01 8B F0 AC 3C 00 74 -09 B4 0E BB 07 00 CD 10 .....<.t........ 
      00000180:EB F2 C3 0D 0A 41 20 64 -69 73 6B 20 72 65 61 64 .....A disk read 
      00000190:20 65 72 72 6F 72 20 6F -63 63 75 72 72 65 64 00 error occurred. 
      000001A0:0D 0A 4E 54 4C 44 52 20 -69 73 20 6D 69 73 73 69 ..NTLDR is missi 
      000001B0:6E 67 00 0D 0A 4E 54 4C -44 52 20 69 73 20 63 6F ng...NTLDR is co 
      000001C0:6D 70 72 65 73 73 65 64 -00 0D 0A 50 72 65 73 73 mpressed...Press 
      000001D0:20 43 74 72 6C 2B 41 6C -74 2B 44 65 6C 20 74 6F Ctrl+Alt+Del to 
      000001E0:20 72 65 73 74 61 72 74 -0D 0A 00 00 00 00 00 00 restart........
      000001F0:00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 -83 A0 B3 C9 00 00 55 AA ..............U. 

The following table describes the fields in the BPB and the extended BPB on NTFS volumes. The fields starting at 0x0B, 0x0D, 0x15, 0x18, 0x1A, and 0x1C match those on FAT16 and FAT32 volumes. The sample values correspond to the data in this example.

Byte Offset

Field Length

Sample Value

Field Name

0x0B

WORD

0x0002

Bytes Per Sector

0x0D

BYTE

0x08

Sectors Per Cluster

0x0E

WORD

0x0000

Reserved Sectors

0x10

3 BYTES

0x000000

always 0

0x13

WORD

0x0000

not used by NTFS

0x15

BYTE

0xF8

Media Descriptor

0x16

WORD

0x0000

always 0

0x18

WORD

0x3F00

Sectors Per Track

0x1A

WORD

0xFF00

Number Of Heads

0x1C

DWORD

0x3F000000

Hidden Sectors

0x20

DWORD

0x00000000

not used by NTFS

0x24

DWORD

0x80008000

not used by NTFS

0x28

LONGLONG

0x4AF57F0000000000

Total Sectors

0x30

LONGLONG

0x0400000000000000

Logical Cluster Number for the file $MFT

0x38

LONGLONG

0x54FF070000000000

Logical Cluster Number for the file $MFTMirr

0x40

DWORD

0xF6000000

Clusters Per File Record Segment

0x44

DWORD

0x01000000

Clusters Per Index Block

0x48

LONGLONG

0x14A51B74C91B741C

Volume Serial Number

0x50

DWORD

0x00000000

Checksum

Protecting the Boot Sector

Because a normally functioning system relies on the boot sector to access a volume, it is highly recommended that you run disk scanning tools such as Chkdsk regularly, as well as back up all of your data files to protect against data loss if you lose access to a volume.

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