+struct inode {
+ /* Timestamps for the inode. The timestamps are the number of
+ * 100-nanosecond intervals that have elapsed since 12:00 A.M., January
+ * 1st, 1601, UTC. This is the same format used in NTFS inodes. */
+ u64 creation_time;
+ u64 last_access_time;
+ u64 last_write_time;
+
+ /* The file attributes associated with this inode. This is a bitwise OR
+ * of the FILE_ATTRIBUTE_* flags. */
+ u32 attributes;
+
+ /* The index of the security descriptor in the WIM image's table of
+ * security descriptors that contains this file's security information.
+ * If -1, no security information exists for this file. */
+ int32_t security_id;
+
+ /* %true iff the inode's lookup table entries has been resolved (i.e.
+ * the @lte field is valid, but the @hash field is not valid)
+ *
+ * (This is not an on-disk field.) */
+ bool resolved;
+
+ u16 num_ads;
+
+ /* A hash of the file's contents, or a pointer to the lookup table entry
+ * for this dentry if the lookup table entries have been resolved.
+ *
+ * More specifically, this is for the un-named default file stream, as
+ * opposed to the alternate (named) file streams, which may have their
+ * own lookup table entries. */
+ union {
+ u8 hash[SHA1_HASH_SIZE];
+ struct lookup_table_entry *lte;
+ };
+
+ /* Identity of a reparse point. See
+ * http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa365503(v=vs.85).aspx
+ * for what a reparse point is. */
+ u32 reparse_tag;
+
+ u32 link_count;
+
+ struct ads_entry **ads_entries;
+
+ u64 ino;
+
+ struct list_head dentry_list;
+ union {
+ struct stream_list_head lte_group_list;
+ struct hlist_node hlist;
+ };
+ char *extracted_file;
+};