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Allocation and lost clusters
I have tried for almost 2 weeks to try to solve my
problems. They are as follow's: My first and most disturbing is this,.... WINDOWS\ALLUSE~1\APPLIC~1 \AOL.\C_AMER~1.OA\IDB\main.idx this must be an AOHell problem but I've tried everything they've suggested I also get Lost Clusters when this happens. This ONLY happens when playing the MMOG WWIIOnline. The allocation error say's that too little or too much space is used for this. I suspect that it would be too little space and was wondering how to aalocate more for it, or am I off base here? And what about the lost clusters. I also believe if the allocation problems fixed those will go away as well?? I've ran Nortons scan disc many times Ive ran spybot I've clear all cache and temp folders and defragged,...Ive reloaded drivers,..checked my connections and cables. I even took my entire system apart,..cleaned everything and still have the same problems. All help and suggestions are VERY GREATLY APPRECIATED. TIA. BRYAN ASP26 |
#2
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Allocation and lost clusters
Lost cluster is not good. It could mean some Hard Drive issues.
http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=67321 -- Henri Leboeuf Web page: http://www.colba.net/~hlebo49/index.htm === "Bryan" wrote in message ... I have tried for almost 2 weeks to try to solve my problems. They are as follow's: My first and most disturbing is this,.... WINDOWS\ALLUSE~1\APPLIC~1 \AOL.\C_AMER~1.OA\IDB\main.idx this must be an AOHell problem but I've tried everything they've suggested I also get Lost Clusters when this happens. This ONLY happens when playing the MMOG WWIIOnline. The allocation error say's that too little or too much space is used for this. I suspect that it would be too little space and was wondering how to aalocate more for it, or am I off base here? And what about the lost clusters. I also believe if the allocation problems fixed those will go away as well?? I've ran Nortons scan disc many times Ive ran spybot I've clear all cache and temp folders and defragged,...Ive reloaded drivers,..checked my connections and cables. I even took my entire system apart,..cleaned everything and still have the same problems. All help and suggestions are VERY GREATLY APPRECIATED. TIA. BRYAN ASP26 |
#3
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Allocation and lost clusters
On Wed, 16 Jun 2004 07:14:47 -0400, "H Leboeuf"
Lost cluster is not good. It could mean some Hard Drive issues. Don't confuse "lost clusters" with "bad clusters" or "bad sectors". A "lost cluster chain" results when a file system update is interrupted. Sometimes the directory entry may have been deleted (or has not yet been created) while data has already been written into a cluster chain that is now chained out of the free space in FAT. In that case, the cluster chain is noted to be chained out of free space, but no other cluster chain links into it, and no directory entry points to the (start of the) chain. It is, in essence, a lost file or subdir, and the fix is to create a new directory entry that points to it. No name, path or true length is known, so an arbitrary name is created in the root to point to it, and the full length of the chain is used for the file's true length in bytes. There's another sequence that gives rise to lost cluster chains. A file update is interrupted such that there is a mismatch between the length of the file in bytes, as held in the dir entry that defines the file, and the implicit length as per number of clusters chained into the file's data area. Scandisk usually "fixes" this by truncating the file's FAT chain as per the directory entry's length in bytes. The rest of the chain is left as a chain, and will later be picked up as a lost cluster chain. Depending on whether Scandisk is set to save or delete these, it will either be pointed to as described earlier, or those cluster addresses will be set to zero, i.e. "unused". Bad clusters are a whole nother order of pain, and have nothing to do with interrupted file operations or bad exits - they are a physical defects in the disk at the hardware level. They can cause lockups and bad exits, so associated file system logic errors are common. A bad cluster is a cluster that contains one or more unreadable sectors. A bad sector is exactly what it sounds like :-) ------------ ----- ---- --- -- - - - - Our senses are our UI to reality ------------ ----- ---- --- -- - - - - |
#4
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Allocation and lost clusters
Thanks,
-- Henri Leboeuf Web page: http://www.colba.net/~hlebo49/index.htm === "cquirke (MVP Win9x)" wrote in message ... On Wed, 16 Jun 2004 07:14:47 -0400, "H Leboeuf" Lost cluster is not good. It could mean some Hard Drive issues. Don't confuse "lost clusters" with "bad clusters" or "bad sectors". A "lost cluster chain" results when a file system update is interrupted. Sometimes the directory entry may have been deleted (or has not yet been created) while data has already been written into a cluster chain that is now chained out of the free space in FAT. In that case, the cluster chain is noted to be chained out of free space, but no other cluster chain links into it, and no directory entry points to the (start of the) chain. It is, in essence, a lost file or subdir, and the fix is to create a new directory entry that points to it. No name, path or true length is known, so an arbitrary name is created in the root to point to it, and the full length of the chain is used for the file's true length in bytes. There's another sequence that gives rise to lost cluster chains. A file update is interrupted such that there is a mismatch between the length of the file in bytes, as held in the dir entry that defines the file, and the implicit length as per number of clusters chained into the file's data area. Scandisk usually "fixes" this by truncating the file's FAT chain as per the directory entry's length in bytes. The rest of the chain is left as a chain, and will later be picked up as a lost cluster chain. Depending on whether Scandisk is set to save or delete these, it will either be pointed to as described earlier, or those cluster addresses will be set to zero, i.e. "unused". Bad clusters are a whole nother order of pain, and have nothing to do with interrupted file operations or bad exits - they are a physical defects in the disk at the hardware level. They can cause lockups and bad exits, so associated file system logic errors are common. A bad cluster is a cluster that contains one or more unreadable sectors. A bad sector is exactly what it sounds like :-) ------------ ----- ---- --- -- - - - - Our senses are our UI to reality ------------ ----- ---- --- -- - - - - |
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