1. Open KFM2 (Kolibri File Manager 2.04 Gold)
2. See directory and file by Properties.
Created: 10.04.2021
Opened: 10.04.2021
Modified: 10.04.2021
4. Copy the directory and the file to the destination.
5. View the copied directory and file by properties.
6. It was set to current date/time.
Created: 15.09.2021
Opened: 15.09.2021
Modified: 15.09.2021
Is there an option to change this behavior? I want to preserve the timestamps when copying.
How to preserve timestamps (Created, Opened, Modified) when copying?
There is no such option in file managers. When you copy a file, you create a new one, that's why the current timestamp is used.
Here are screenshots that show exactly what I mean.
Unfortunately, there are no options under Settings to change this behavior.
An option like this "Preserve all timestamps (Created, Opened, Modified)" is missing.
An option like this "Preserve all timestamps (Created, Opened, Modified)" is missing.
Good catch. I didn't know this issue before. Thanks for the report.
So.
Which of the timestamps must be saved from the original (Created, Opened, Modified) ?
\Me is the author of Eolite/KFM2.
So.
Which of the timestamps must be saved from the original (Created, Opened, Modified) ?
\Me is the author of Eolite/KFM2.
Из хаоса в космос
According to my analysis, a copy of directories and files is an exact copy, which means the default behavior should be to copy all available timestamps from the original.Leency wrote:Good catch. I didn't know this issue before. Thanks for the report.
So.
Which of the timestamps must be saved from the original (Created, Opened, Modified) ?
\Me is the author of Eolite/KFM2.
Can you support it?
Hello!
For files Windows makes all changes according to the time stamp when copying except for the "Modified" field.
The folder contains only the field "Created," which also changes at the time of copying.
For files Windows makes all changes according to the time stamp when copying except for the "Modified" field.
The folder contains only the field "Created," which also changes at the time of copying.
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