CA Access Control supports both logical and absolute file name formats. For example, if the file foo.txt is located under the directory \tmp on the logical drive D and the logical name “D:” is assigned to physical disk 1, partition 0, you can use either the logical or absolute file name to define a file to the CA Access Control database:
nr file D:\tmp\foo.txt
or
nr file \Device\HardDisk1\Partition1\tmp\foo.txt
Note: If the second format is used, the file remains protected even if the logical name of the disk is changed. The absolute file name format is also supported for CA Access Control generic file protection.
CA Access Control protects all file systems currently used in supported Windows operating systems. The two most commonly used are the Windows file system (NTFS) and the file allocation table (FAT). CA Access Control also supports CDFS (a file system especially for CDs).
CA Access Control supplies a total security solution to the file allocation table (FAT) and an extra layer of security to other file systems including NTFS and CDFS.
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