Windows xp reporting wrong free space
You may wish to free up some disk space will also aid in getting rid of things you do not utilize by going through these steps:. Windows XP should take between 4. If you are comfortable with the stability of your system, you can delete the uninstall files for the patches that Windows XP has installed You can run Disk Cleanup - built into Windows XP - to erase all but your latest restore point and cleanup even more "loose files"..
When you hibernate your computer, Windows saves the contents of the system's memory to the hiberfil. As a result, the size of the hiberfil. If you don't use the hibernate feature and want to recapture the space that Windows uses for the hiberfil. Click Start, right-click My Computer, and then click Properties. Click the System Restore tab. Highlight one of your drives or C: if you only have one and click on the "Settings" button. Change the percentage of disk space you wish to allow..
I suggest moving the slider until you have just about 1GB MB or close to that Click OK.. If you think the hardware is sound and you have solid data backups, I would give it a good DoD wipe as LarryG suggested. Alternatively, you could use something like CCleaner to wipe the remaining free space, but I would recommend a defrag first. I've seen issues with some of the earlier SSDs reporting incorrect disk usage, so make sure firmware is up to date on those.
Seems it was simply a coincidence. Thank you for all your replies and suggestions, I have learned a thing or two this week. To continue this discussion, please ask a new question.
Get answers from your peers along with millions of IT pros who visit Spiceworks. Any suggestions? Best Answer. Pure Capsaicin. DragonsRule This person is a verified professional. Verify your account to enable IT peers to see that you are a professional. This problem occurs because of a limitation in the server message block SMB protocol. Unfortunately, this command uses the Tree ID from the tree connect to determine which volume to query. If you access a mount point through a share on another volume, the tree connect is to the share.
Therefore, the Tree ID refers to the volume that has the share and not to the volume to which the mount points. Additionally, "Free space" and "Used Space" information may be displayed incorrectly in Windows Explorer. This problem occurs if you mapped a drive to a share that links to a mounted volume by using NTFS volume mount points or by using symbolic links.
Notice the bytes free summary line that shows the bytes information. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. I had XP on an older machine and even with a installed programs to the default windows Program directory there was never ore than 14GB used on the system partition even after years of use.
When I open the drive letter it is installed on it only has three folders with the size on disk reported as follows. This thread is locked.
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