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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Green Filenames - Why? I have some files (a web site) that a friend sent me in a zip file generated on his Mac. The zip file unzips without any problems (apart from all those pesky zero size files you have to ignore). I now have a load of files that all appear fine except that they won't appear on my web site due to access violations. Also, the file names appear in green in my Vista file browser. I have never seen a green file name in Vista before. Can someone tell me what it means please? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Green Filenames - Why? Sorbukar wrote: Quote: > I have some files (a web site) that a friend sent me in a zip file > generated on his Mac. The zip file unzips without any problems (apart > from all those pesky zero size files you have to ignore). I now have > a load of files that all appear fine except that they won't appear on > my web site due to access violations. > > Also, the file names appear in green in my Vista file browser. I have > never seen a green file name in Vista before. Can someone tell me > what it means please? The files may be encrypted. IIRC...blue indicates that a file is compressed and green indicates that a file is encrypted. -- John Inzer MS Picture It! - Digital Image MVP Digital Image Highlights and FAQs http://tinyurl.com/aczzp Notice This is not tech support I am a volunteer Solutions that work for me may not work for you Proceed at your own risk |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Green Filenames - Why? interesting idea. how could I confirm that? The files open in textpad or similar and look ordinary and there isnothing obvious in properties. "John Inzer" wrote: Quote: > Sorbukar wrote: Quote: > > I have some files (a web site) that a friend sent me in a zip file > > generated on his Mac. The zip file unzips without any problems (apart > > from all those pesky zero size files you have to ignore). I now have > > a load of files that all appear fine except that they won't appear on > > my web site due to access violations. > > > > Also, the file names appear in green in my Vista file browser. I have > > never seen a green file name in Vista before. Can someone tell me > > what it means please? > The files may be encrypted. > > IIRC...blue indicates that a file is compressed > and green indicates that a file is encrypted. > > -- > > John Inzer > MS Picture It! - > Digital Image MVP > > Digital Image > Highlights and FAQs > http://tinyurl.com/aczzp > > Notice > This is not tech support > I am a volunteer > > Solutions that work for > me may not work for you > > Proceed at your own risk > > > |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Green Filenames - Why? Sorbukar wrote: Quote: > interesting idea. how could I confirm that? The files open in textpad > or similar and look ordinary and there isnothing obvious in > properties. I'm not positive but you could try the following... right click the file and choose... Properties / Advanced button... you may find a checkbox that says: "Encrypt Contents To Secure Data". -- John Inzer MS Picture It! - Digital Image MVP Digital Image Highlights and FAQs http://tinyurl.com/aczzp Notice This is not tech support I am a volunteer Solutions that work for me may not work for you Proceed at your own risk |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: Green Filenames - Why? John, Thanks. I tried that and found a whole load of dialogs I never knew existed. Switched off the encryption option on all the files and the web site now works perfectly. Thanks very much. Andy "John Inzer" wrote: Quote: > Sorbukar wrote: Quote: > > interesting idea. how could I confirm that? The files open in textpad > > or similar and look ordinary and there isnothing obvious in > > properties. > I'm not positive but you could try the following... > right click the file and choose... > Properties / Advanced button... > you may find a checkbox that says: > "Encrypt Contents To Secure Data". > > -- > > John Inzer > MS Picture It! - > Digital Image MVP > > Digital Image > Highlights and FAQs > http://tinyurl.com/aczzp > > Notice > This is not tech support > I am a volunteer > > Solutions that work for > me may not work for you > > Proceed at your own risk > > > |
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| | #6 (permalink) |
| | Re: Green Filenames - Why? Sorbukar wrote: Quote: > John, > > Thanks. I tried that and found a whole load of dialogs I never knew > existed. Switched off the encryption option on all the files and the > web site now works perfectly. Thanks very much. > > Andy You're welcome. Thanks for the feedback. -- John Inzer MS Picture It! - Digital Image MVP Digital Image Highlights and FAQs http://tinyurl.com/aczzp Notice This is not tech support I am a volunteer Solutions that work for me may not work for you Proceed at your own risk |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| | RE: Green Filenames - Why? The fact that the files are encrypted in the first place appears to be a bug/feature of Vista's built-in extractor when dealing with files compressed in OS X with OS X's built-in GUI compression utility. This issue can be easily recreated. Take any file on a Mac running OS X 10.4.x or higher (I've been unable to test this with earlier versions of OS X) and Ctrl-click/Right-Click on it and choose 'Compress "Filename". Then move that file to a PC running Windows Vista with all current updates and no additional extraction software (i.e. no WinZip or WinRAR). In Vista, right-click on the file and choose 'Extract All...' Vista extracts the file(s) to a folder with the same name as the compressed file, the files contained in the folder have green filenames indicating they are encrypted. Vista's extractor encrypts the files during the extraction process. Examining the properties of the file shows me that the account associated with the encryption is vista_user(vista_user@xxxxxx_machine_name). It's easy enough to remove the encryption by right clicking and modifying the attributes. This only occurs with files compressed in OS X and extracted with Vista's built-in extractor. This does not occur if WinZip or WinRAR is used to extract the files on the Vista machine or with XP's built-in extractor. This also does not occur the OS X command-line zip utility is used to compress the file(s). The command line-utility does not include the HFS metadata for the compressed files that the GUI compression utility does include. It seems that if Vista's extractor sees that data it decides that it needs to encrypt the files it's extracting. I'd really like to understand why the Vista extractor is adding encryption to the OS X compressed files when it extracts them. It's obviously not a major problem, but the first time a Vista user extracts a Mac compressed file in this manner on Vista they're prompted to back up encryption keys so they don't lose access to their files. Vista's dialogue boxes do not specify which files, so for less savvy users, these messages can be extremely alarming. Can anyone please explain why Vista's extractor is behaving in this manner with files compressed on a Mac? I've literally searched all over the Internet trying to understand this. Fortunately, I have a workaround with OS X's command line utility, but I'd really like to understand why Vista is doing this in the first place. Any information would be greatly appreciated. |
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