NTFS+Drives+How+to+Locate+and+Correct+Disk+Space+Problems

NTFS Drives How to Locate and Correct Disk Space Problems

On occasions the free disk space on NTFS‐formatted volumes in Windows XP are reported

incorrectly or even reported as lost.

It can happen after a power surge, or improper system shutdown, or as a result of a

malicious intruder, or even due to other causes.

To save space and typing volumes I respectfully point you to the Microsoft page which

deals with this problem in a very detailed fashion.

See :‐

KB article 315688 at :‐

Microsoft support []

//SUMMARY//

//The NTFS file system supports many volume- and file-level features that may cause free disk space to be either//

//misreported or reported as lost. You may notice this behavior if an NTFS volume suddenly becomes very full,//

//and you cannot find the cause or locate the folders and files that cause the NTFS volume to become full. This//

//behavior may occur if a user gains malicious or unauthorized access to an NTFS volume on which either very//

//large files or a high quantity of small files are secretly copied, and then removes or restricts NTFS permissions//

//on these files. This behavior may also occur after a system malfunction or a power outage that causes volume//

//corruption to occur.//

//This article describes how to check NTFS disk space allocation to either discover offending files and folders or//

//locate volume corruption. This article is intended for users of Windows XP operating systems that support//

//advanced storage features and troubleshooting methods.//