Tooltips 123138
Tooltips 123138
Can alternatively achieved by checking the [x] Options when opening a case.
#D568 Choose whether or not users get to see labels of other users or only their
own associations (or, if half checked, only their own associations plus those of
unknown users). The same file can be assigned the same label only by 1 examiner.
#D569 Half-checked, initials are showing in the directory browser only; fully
checked, it also applies to Export List, Recover/Copy, or the Case Report.
#907E Fully checked: force decomposition of V1 GUIDs into timestamp, sequence
number and MAC address; half-checked: only do so, if the timestamp is not too
implausible; unchecked: never decompose, always show in format like {E0FFD8FF-1000-
464A-4946-000102000001}
#6E33 Existing and previously existing volume shadow copy host files are checked
for valuable information that would not be available otherwise, such as files that
cannot be found in the current $MFT any more or previous versions of files whose
contents have changed. Those files will be reconstructed up to 1 GB in length
according to the shadow copy. Processing of volume shadow copies, if any, occurs
before all the other operations that are part of the particularly thorough file
system data structure search.
#6E3B Avoid that previous versions of files if they are exact duplicates (identical
file contents) so that it is much easier to focus on files for which actually
previous data is still available. Even if modification dates are different, the
file contents are often the same for files installed by the operation system. Fully
selected, XWF will compare files up to 128 MB, if half selected, only up to 16 MB,
as to not waste too much time on this feature.
#6E39 FILE records can be optionally searched everywhere, in sectors that neither
belong to the current MFT nor to a volume shadow copy (VSC) processed by the above-
mentioned option. Such FILE records can be found e.g. in free space after a
partition has been recreated, reformatted, moved, resized, or defragmented. Time
consuming on very large partitions.
#6E34 Current $LogFile and old versions of $LogFile found in VSC can be exploited.
The contents of deleted files can often be reconstructed thanks to $LogFile. Index
record remnants in $LogFile can be exploited that either reveal previous names or
paths of renamed/moved files/directories that were known to the volume snapshot
before or deleted files that the volume snapshot was not aware of before.
#6E40 You can indicate whether you are interested in earlier names and paths of
renamed/moved files and directories or not. If the checkbox for earlier names/paths
is half checked, you may find earlier names/paths of renamed/moved files in the
Metadata column and don't get additional files in the volume snapshot for each
earlier name/path.
#6E3F You can also indicate whether you are interested including traces of files in
the volume snapshot whose clusters are unknown and for which only name, size,
timestamps and attributes are available.
#6C28 File counts can optionally be displayed in the directory browser at the end
of the names of directories and files with child objects. If fully checked, that
will happen also in the directory tree in the Case Data window.
#6C2A By default, the Path column displays a partial path from the current
exploration base when exploring recursively. If fully checked, a partial path
starts with the subdirectory name. If half checked, it starts with ...\ to point
out the omission.
#57BD Fully ticked, even known notable files will be omitted - as they are known to
be notable, further processing may well not be required.
#57BF Please ensure, if using this option, that only the files you truly wish to
not see processed are currently filtered out!
#577D Instead of processing only the current volume snapshot, extend the processing
across multiple, or indeed all, volumes in the case.
#5763 If enabled, certain previously valid timestamps of files are output as events
during various suboperations of the particularly thorough file system data
structure search on NTFS, which may also effect other operations whose primary
purpose is not the retrieval of timestamps/events. (See "Extract internal metadata,
browser history and events" for the regular event provision functions.)
#57C0 See Description column "Hard link" and "Hard link, optionally omitted" for
files affected.
#7327 The Sector reading cache accelerates sequential disk access by the disk
editor. This option is recommended particularly when scrolling through CD-ROM and
floppy disk sectors, since the number of necessary physical accesses is
significantly reduced.
#7357 For the most complete dark screen experience you would change your entire
Windows system to a dark theme. The easiest way to achieve that not only for
"apps", but also real desktop applications, is to activate the black high contrast
theme. In Windows 10 you would go to PC Settings | Personalization | Settings for
high contrast | Activate high contrast | Contrast black.
#2F2D Fully/half checked: different symbols in Existent column represent
existing/prev. exist./virtual. Not checked: uses words yes/no/virtual instead.
#2F3C If the Created date is greater (read: later) than the Modified date, then the
file was likely copied in Windows, which creates this precise situation. This
option adds the word "copied" to the Description to illustrate this fact.
#6C25 Use checkmarks instead of squares for tagging. Alternatively, use buttons on
the right to define color gradient for the squares.
#6C78 Flex Filters can target any column in the ordinary directory browser that the
user wishes to focus on, with an arbitrary number of substrings, and they can be
combined with a logical OR or a logical AND. So this makes them the only filters
that can be combined with one another with a logical OR.
#6D5B A user-designated copy of the FAT table can be used, or otherwise the one
that is defined as active in the boot sector (in case of FAT32). If neither the
user selects a copy nor the boot sector defines a single copy as active, the first
copy will be used, labelled as "FAT 1".
#6D35 Allows running a more in-depth parsing of deleted directory entries during
the initial creation of the volume snapshot, even if they are misaligned in
relation to the current directory entries. This might find additional previously
existing files in Ext, at a likely manageable risk of finding some garbage entries
as well.
#6D41 Newly discovered names (e.g. e-mail subject lines of original .eml files or
names of files in iPhone backups) can become the main filenames in a volume
snapshot (and thus also potentially part of paths if they have child objects), so
that the original names as per the file system becomes alternative names, or they
can become the alternative names themselves, displayed in a lighter color after the
main names in square brackets as additional information. If half selected, only
subject lines found in original .eml files become main names.
#6D43 Assigns all fragmented files in a newly created volume snapshot a special
label.
#6D3B Convert certain RTF-formatted e-mail bodies from Outlook e-mail archives to
plain UTF-8 (when extracting e-mails) to be able to better view generated .eml
files in external e-mail clients and to allow for the alternative .eml preview.
#6D42 Alternative interpretation of extended timestamps has an effect when
including the contents of file archives in the volume snapshot.
#6E35 Similar to the procedure for FAT. Checks the entire volume for previously
existing directory structures whose contents are no longer known from corresponding
inodes (these would have been looked at as part of the regular volume snapshot
already). Such directories are listed with a generic name, usually in "Path
unknown", but potentially in the root directory, if that is where they existed
previously.
#6E32 Certain previously existing files that otherwise would be presented only with
file system metadata and no contents can be associated with data using the
Ext3/Ext4 journal.
#5772 FAT: Searches for orphaned subdirectories that are no longer referenced by
any other directory.