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Windows Tips: Check Your Disks for Errors, With a Single Click



 
 
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Old August 30th 06, 06:06 AM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage
Ablang
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Default Windows Tips: Check Your Disks for Errors, With a Single Click

Windows Tips: Check Your Disks for Errors, With a Single Click
Automate hard-drive maintenance; XP Pro vs. XP Home; the versatile
Power Menu utility.
Scott Dunn
Wednesday, July 30, 2003 01:00 AM PDT

Last February I described how to automate hard-disk scans in Windows
98 and Me. Several readers have written to ask for the lowdown on
automatic disk scans in Windows 2000 and XP. You can create a shortcut
and automate disk scans in these operating systems, though doing so
takes a little work and know-how.

Unlike previous Windows versions, 2000 and XP won't let you fix errors
as you check a disk whose files are in use. Windows can override this
in some cases (as I describe below). But checking your Windows drive
while Windows itself is running is out of the question: Windows simply
asks whether you want to schedule the process to occur the next time
you restart your computer.

Figure 1: Windows 2000 and XP hide error checking in your Disk
Properties dialog box. The Windows approach: If you're new to Windows
2000 or XP, you may have difficulty finding the error-checking feature
at all, since the ScanDisk icon doesn't appear in the System Tools
menu as it does in other Windows versions. To get to this feature,
double-click My Computer or open an Explorer window, right-click the
icon for the drive you want to check, and choose Properties.
(Alternatively, you can open Properties by Alt-double-clicking a drive
icon or by selecting it and pressing Alt-Enter.) Click the Tools tab,
and under 'Error-checking', click Check Now. For many drives, that
button is misnamed, if you choose to fix file system errors; when you
tell the utility to begin, instead of "checking now" it will ask to
schedule the scan at the next restart.

In the Check Disk dialog box, select your options and click Start. If
you leave both check boxes empty, the scan will begin immediately, as
it will only be checking the disk and not fixing any errors it finds.
If you mark one of the check boxes, the program may say that you need
to restart your PC before the process can begin. If that's okay, click
Yes. If it isn't, try the shortcut approach described below. To
schedule several disks for error-checking the next time you reboot,
repeat the steps above for each drive.

The shortcut approach: If you prefer not to open Properties for every
drive that needs checking--and then futz with various tabs, buttons,
and prompts--you can launch the error-checking process from a shortcut
icon, complete with the settings you use most often. You may have to
answer prompts in some cases, but this technique entails a lot less
clicking.

To create a batch file that launches the Chkdsk program, click Start,
Programs (All Programs in XP), Accessories, Notepad, and type chkdsk
followed by a space, the letter of the drive you want to check, and a
colon (for example, chkdsk d.

Add to this line the appropriate switches for the options you want,
separated by spaces. Among the most useful switches is /f, which has
the same effect as the Automatically fix file system errors option in
the Check Disk dialog box described earlier. If the drive you're
checking is already in use, you can add the /x switch to allow Windows
to lock the drive for its exclusive use while it performs the error
check (a feature you get only by employing this technique). You won't
be able to save files to that drive until the error check is complete,
at which time everything returns to normal. Unfortunately, even with
the /x switch, you can't run Chkdsk on a Windows drive. Windows will
ask if you want to schedule the procedure for the next reboot, just as
in the previous method. Take it (enter y) or leave it (enter n).

Next page: Command and Control

http://www.pcworld.com/article/id,11...l?tk=nl_srxcol
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  #2  
Old August 31st 06, 07:06 AM posted to comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.storage
John Turco
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Posts: 252
Default Windows Tips: Check Your Disks for Errors, With a Single Click

Ablang wrote:

Windows Tips: Check Your Disks for Errors, With a Single Click
Automate hard-drive maintenance; XP Pro vs. XP Home; the versatile
Power Menu utility.
Scott Dunn
Wednesday, July 30, 2003 01:00 AM PDT

Last February I described how to automate hard-disk scans in Windows
98 and Me. Several readers have written to ask for the lowdown on
automatic disk scans in Windows 2000 and XP. You can create a shortcut
and automate disk scans in these operating systems, though doing so
takes a little work and know-how.


edited, for brevity

Hello, Ablang:

That's a rather old "PC World" article! Why are you copying and pasting
it, here, more than three years after it was written?


Cordially,
John Turco
 




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