I have a very old car radio that can play music from USB fash drives when they are formatted in FAT16 or FAT32, but it sorts files by the short 8.3 file name, not by the long file name. I want to play audiobooks that are divided into multiple files, but Windows sometimes generates f***ed up 8.3 file names. Here's an example of the output of dir /x
of a folder that contains Internet1.mp3 to Internet7.mp3:
Short Long
30.12.2020 15:59 2.186.859 INTERN~1.MP3 Internet1.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 2.507.643 INTERN~2.MP3 Internet2.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 2.423.319 INTERN~3.MP3 Internet3.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 2.110.163 INTERN~4.MP3 Internet4.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 2.007.345 IN1FAB~1.MP3 Internet5.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 2.921.422 IN64EF~1.MP3 Internet6.mp3
30.12.2020 15:59 3.290.689 INB914~1.MP3 Internet7.mp3
As you can see, the files Internet5.mp3 to Internet7.mp3 will be played before Internet1.mp3 to Internet4.mp3 since they have the random short file names. Some of my audiobooks are divided into more than 100 parts, so i'd like to have a script (Batch, Powershell, Python, whatever) that automatically sets the short file name to something usable, Ie INT1.MP3 to INT7.MP3 There is no problem regarding which folder to play. The long file names contain an ascending numer (here 1 to 7) that gives away the correct order of the files.
You can use this to change all files matching the Internet*
pattern to INTxxxxx
$i = 0
foreach ($f in ls Internet*) {
fsutil file setShortName $f ("INT" + $i.ToString("D5") + ".MP3")
$i++
}
You can change ls Internet*
to just ls
to ignore the prefix and rename all files in the folder
$i = 0; foreach ($f in ls *.mp3) { fsutil file setShortName $f ($i.ToString("D8") + ".MP3"); $i++ }
Unfortunately you can set short names for files on NTFS partitions, as it's the restriction right from the SetFileShortName()
Win32 API
Sets the short name for the specified file. The file must be on an NTFS file system volume.
Therefore the only way you can do for a FAT16/32 partition is rename all your files to a short 8.3 name like this
$i = 0; foreach ($f in ls *.mp3) { mv $f ($i.ToString("D8") + ".MP3"); $i++ }
Of course you can also use the INTxxxxx.MP3
format like above
You can manually hex edit the partition to set the short names and recalculate the checksums but it'll be fragile unless someone writes a tool to automate all those things
Note that names like IN1FAB~1.MP3
or IN64EF~1.MP3
are not random. They're the hash of the file names because it's obvious that the File~NUMBER
pattern doesn't work if there are more than 9 files with that prefix in the folder so something more robust must be used
On all NT versions including Windows 2000 and later, if at least 4 files or folders already exist with the same extension and first 6 characters in their short names, the stripped LFN is instead truncated to the first 2 letters of the basename (or 1 if the basename has only 1 letter), followed by 4 hexadecimal digits derived from an undocumented hash of the filename, followed by a tilde, followed by a single digit, followed by a period
.
, followed by the first 3 characters of the extension.
- Example:
TextFile.Mine.txt
becomesTE021F~1.TXT
.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/8.3_filename#VFAT_and_computer-generated_8.3_filenames
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