PowerShell: Meaning of File Attributes

By Xah Lee. Date: . Last updated: .

What is File Attribute

Directory and file have attributes, such as Read Only, Hidden, System.

File attributes affects some command behavior.

For example:

List of All File Attributes and Their Meaning

Archive

This file is marked to be included in incremental backup operation. Windows sets this attribute whenever the file is modified, and backup software should clear it when processing the file during incremental backup.

Compressed

The file is compressed.

Device

Reserved for future use.

Directory

The file is a directory. Directory is supported on Windows, Linux, and macOS.

Encrypted

The file or directory is encrypted. For a file, this means that all data in the file is encrypted. For a directory, this means that encryption is the default for newly created files and directories.

Hidden

The file is hidden, and thus is not included in an ordinary directory listing. Hidden is supported on Windows, Linux, and macOS.

IntegrityStream

The file or directory includes data integrity support. When this value is applied to a file, all data streams in the file have integrity support. When this value is applied to a directory, all new files and subdirectories within that directory, by default, include integrity support.

Normal

The file is a standard file that has no special attributes. This attribute is valid only if it is used alone. Normal is supported on Windows, Linux, and macOS.

NoScrubData

The file or directory is excluded from the data integrity scan. When this value is applied to a directory, by default, all new files and subdirectories within that directory are excluded from data integrity.

NotContentIndexed

The file will not be indexed by the operating system's content indexing service.

Offline

The file is offline. The data of the file is not immediately available.

ReadOnly

The file is read-only. ReadOnly is supported on Windows, Linux, and macOS. On Linux and macOS, changing the ReadOnly flag is a permissions operation.

ReparsePoint

The file contains a reparse point, which is a block of user-defined data associated with a file or a directory. ReparsePoint is supported on Windows, Linux, and macOS.

SparseFile

The file is a sparse file. Sparse files are typically large files whose data consists of mostly zeros.

System

The file is a system file. That is, the file is part of the operating system or is used exclusively by the operating system.

Temporary

The file is temporary. A temporary file contains data that is needed while an application is executing but is not needed after the application is finished. File systems try to keep all the data in memory for quicker access rather than flushing the data back to mass storage. A temporary file should be deleted by the application as soon as it is no longer needed.

Reference: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.io.fileattributes

PowerShell: File Attributes