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March 08, 2000 10:03 AM

Directory Junctions vs. Dfs

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #8321
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If you're familiar with Microsoft's Dfs add-on for Windows NT 4.0, or Windows 2000's (Win2K's) upgraded feature with the same name, you might notice that NTFS directory junctions have strong similarities to Dfs. However, NTFS directory junctions and Dfs have significant differences, and you use the features for different purposes. Table A provides a summary of the differences between these two technologies.

TABLE A: Comparison of Dfs Junction Points and NTFS Directory Junctions
FeatureDfs Junction PointsNTFS Directory Junctions
Junction point originLocal network shareLocal NTFS directory
Junction point targetAny network shareAny valid local directory
Fault tolerance capabilitiesYes (in Win2K)No
RecoverableYesYes (through Chkdsk)
Multiple-target capableYesNo
Clustering supportYesNo
APIYesYes
Graphical management toolsYesMinimal
RequirementsWin2K or NT Server 4.0Win2K with NTFS 5.5 (NTFS5)

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