Gerry
Fri Mar 21 07:56:18 PDT 2008
MAP
He already has <G>.
--
Regards.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
MAP wrote:
> Cyril N. Alberga wrote:
>> Perhaps I see what is happening then. All the disks were set to 12%,
>> which is the highest that "My Computer" seems to allow, while 1% is
>> the lowest. I had tried the 1% values based on someone up-thread
>> saying that 750 Mbytes (I think) should be sufficient, and 1% gave
>> over 2 Gbytes. My confusion was based on the fact that all the other
>> disks had much smaller areas marked as "reserved", even though they
>> are shown as 12% in the "property" box. I suppose the space has been
>> used for data files, as most of the disks are fairly full.
>> Thanks to everyone who has helped clear up my puzzlement.
>>
>> Cyril
>>
>> John John wrote:
>>> You can't push the MFT Zone reservation to 1%. The
>>> NtfsMftZoneReservation is set in the registry, possible values for
>>> the entry and the corresponding reserved space are:
>>>
>>> 1 = 12.5%
>>> 2 = 25%
>>> 3 = 37.5%
>>> 4 = 50%
>>>
>>> You already have this set to the lowest possible value.
>>>
>>> Because MFT fragmentation can degrade performance the file system
>>> preemptively reserves a large contiguous block for the MFT when the
>>> drive is formatted. This space isn't lost, it will be used when
>>> needed. If the disk runs out of space for files the file system
>>> will relent and yield space for the files from the MFT zone. The
>>> opposite is also true, if the MFT zone fills up it will take space
>>> from the available (free) disk space for its needs. When either of
>>> these happen the MFT will become fragmented and the built in disk
>>> defragmenter will not be able to defragment it. Also note that
>>> small files of 1KB or less are stored in the MFT.
>>>
>>> John
>>>
>>> Cyril N. Alberga wrote:
>>>
>>>> Thank you -- I think... I followed the instructions, there were
>>>> 12% of the disk reserved, and I pushed it down to 1% (a bit over 1
>>>> gig). But diskeeper still thinks there is a hugh chunk. Do I have
>>>> to shutdown and restart before I see the effects?
>>>>
>>>> Cyril
>>>>
>>>> JS wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> See:
http://answers.google.com/answers/threadview?id=780063
>>>>>
>>>>> JS
>>>>>
>>>>> "Cyril N. Alberga" <calberga@bellatlantic.net> wrote in message
>>>>> news:eDiboQdiIHA.4536@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm running XP Pro, SP2.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I recently did two things.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> First, I took a 250 GByte FAT external harddrive, backed it
>>>>>> contents up to another drive and reformatted it as NTFS, then
>>>>>> restored the contents.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Second, I installed an incremental defrag program, Diskeeper, on
>>>>>> my system. When I looked at the newly reformatted drive Diskeeper
>>>>>> reports that over 10% is "Reserved System Space". This is an
>>>>>> order of magnitude more than on any of my other 250 or 300 Gbyte
>>>>>> drives, or even my one 500 Gbyte drive.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Could this be an error in the defrag program? (The company says
>>>>>> no.) If such a large chunk of the drive is reserved does that
>>>>>> mean that it will never be used for my data? Is there any way to
>>>>>> shrink this allocation?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I hope this is the right place to ask this.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Cyril N. Alberga
>
> Do not confuse the MFT with system restore.