A Windows Vista forum. Vista Banter

Welcome to Vista Banter.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support.

Go Back   Home » Vista Banter forum » Microsoft Windows Vista » Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance)

Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -



 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old April 14th 07, 09:00 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
mwhiting001@hotmail.com.NO_SPAM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line) defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report. It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7 GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?
  #2 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 12:16 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
mwhiting001@hotmail.com.NO_SPAM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -

I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first, ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it is a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost reads as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give detail on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the "problem". Can
anyone help?

Thanks, Mike

" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line) defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report. It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7 GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?

  #3 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 01:01 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Rock
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,411
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -

" wrote
I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first,
ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it is
a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have
read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of
two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost reads
as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give detail
on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the "problem".
Can
anyone help?


" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line)
defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the
lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?


I think it's more because no one knows the answer or has seen this issue
before. This is a peer to peer user group, and Vista is a new OS.

--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

  #4 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 03:12 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
mwhiting001@hotmail.com.NO_SPAM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defr

OK, thanks. I'll keep monitoring.

"Rock" wrote:

" wrote
I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first,
ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it is
a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have
read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of
two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost reads
as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give detail
on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the "problem".
Can
anyone help?


" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line)
defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the
lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?


I think it's more because no one knows the answer or has seen this issue
before. This is a peer to peer user group, and Vista is a new OS.

--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]


  #5 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 04:20 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Rock
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,411
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defr

Ok, good luck.
--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

" wrote
OK, thanks. I'll keep monitoring.


"Rock" wrote:

" wrote
I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first,
ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it
is
a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have
read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of
two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost
reads
as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give
detail
on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if
Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the
"problem".
Can
anyone help?


" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with
both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line)
defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a
report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about
.7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the
lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of
two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space"
value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?


I think it's more because no one knows the answer or has seen this issue
before. This is a peer to peer user group, and Vista is a new OS.


  #6 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 05:42 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Rock
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,411
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defr

" wrote
OK, thanks. I'll keep monitoring.


"Rock" wrote:

" wrote
I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first,
ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it
is
a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have
read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of
two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost
reads
as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give
detail
on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if
Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the
"problem".
Can
anyone help?


" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with
both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line)
defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a
report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about
.7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the
lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of
two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space"
value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?


I think it's more because no one knows the answer or has seen this issue
before. This is a peer to peer user group, and Vista is a new OS.


Another person recently posted this same issue in the vista.general
newsgroup. So now there are two of you who have seen this. Maybe it occurs
across the board, but you are the only ones who have seen it and posted
about it. I haven't seen any replies to his post yet.

--
Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell]

  #7 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 06:55 AM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
DP
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 877
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defr


"Rock" wrote in message
...
" wrote


Another person recently posted this same issue in the vista.general
newsgroup. So now there are two of you who have seen this. Maybe it
occurs across the board, but you are the only ones who have seen it and
posted about it. I haven't seen any replies to his post yet.


I have seen it too, using a simple "degfrag c:" in the command prompt (i.e.,
no switches in the command). I have wondered about it as well and was hoping
your question would get an answer.

Besides this being a new OS, I'm guessing that 97 percent of users simply
use the GUI defrag, not the command-line defrag. I use the the command line
since I have two disks in three partitions for a total of about 175gb. It
takes a LONG time to defrag all of that.
Also, I'm being overly cautious and maybe I shouldnt be. But I'm a little
wary of having Vista defrag an XP drive (I dual boot), so I avoid doing that
by using the command-line method.
Since the command-line method involves using the right-click "run as
administrator," that makes the method fairly well hidden to most users.
Hence my estimate that only 3 percent of us use it.
I'll keep monitoring as well.






  #8 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 02:03 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
mikeyhsd
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 939
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defr

that would only be successful if you disabled the built in Scheduled Task for defrag run.
if you have not disabled it, the it is defragging the xp partition as well.







"DP" wrote in message ...

"Rock" wrote in message
...
" wrote


Another person recently posted this same issue in the vista.general
newsgroup. So now there are two of you who have seen this. Maybe it
occurs across the board, but you are the only ones who have seen it and
posted about it. I haven't seen any replies to his post yet.


I have seen it too, using a simple "degfrag c:" in the command prompt (i.e.,
no switches in the command). I have wondered about it as well and was hoping
your question would get an answer.

Besides this being a new OS, I'm guessing that 97 percent of users simply
use the GUI defrag, not the command-line defrag. I use the the command line
since I have two disks in three partitions for a total of about 175gb. It
takes a LONG time to defrag all of that.
Also, I'm being overly cautious and maybe I shouldnt be. But I'm a little
wary of having Vista defrag an XP drive (I dual boot), so I avoid doing that
by using the command-line method.
Since the command-line method involves using the right-click "run as
administrator," that makes the method fairly well hidden to most users.
Hence my estimate that only 3 percent of us use it.
I'll keep monitoring as well.






  #9 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 03:03 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
David A. Lessnau
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 114
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -

I see similar things here (Vista Ultimate, all NTFS). I'm pretty sure it
doesn't happen all the time, just sometimes. For instance, I just did a
"defrag -c -w -v" from the command line to see if I could reproduce this
(I've included the report after these comments). Used Space on the C: drive
increased from 13.35GB to 13.65GB and Free Space decreased from 6.18GB to
5.88GB. On the D: drive, Used Space increased from 71.43GB to 73.48GB and
Free Space decreased from 58.09GB to 56.04GB. In both cases, this is the
opposite of what I'd expect from defragmenting the drives. My guess is that
defrag is padding some of the newly defragmented files with free space so
future increases in file size can be handled without going through a space
allocation process. Again, that's purely a guess.

C:\Windows\system32defrag -c -w -v
Windows Disk Defragmenter
Copyright (c) 2006 Microsoft Corp.

Defragmentation report for volume C: Vista

Volume size = 19.53 GB
Cluster size = 4 KB
Used space = 13.35 GB
Free space = 6.18 GB
Percent free space = 31 %

File fragmentation
Percent file fragmentation = 0 %
Total movable files = 68,794
Average file size = 224 KB
Total fragmented files = 262
Total excess fragments = 477
Average fragments per file = 1.00
Total unmovable files = 56

Free space fragmentation
Free space = 6.18 GB
Total free space extent = 7,080
Average free space per extent = 915 KB
Largest free space extent = 4.39 GB

Folder fragmentation
Total folders = 9,761
Fragmented folders = 2
Excess folder fragments = 6

Master File Table (MFT) fragmentation
Total MFT size = 73 MB
MFT record count = 68,929
Percent MFT in use = 92
Total MFT fragments = 3

Note: On NTFS volumes, file fragments larger than 64MB are not included
in the fragmentation statistics

Defragmentation report for volume C: Vista

Volume size = 19.53 GB
Cluster size = 4 KB
Used space = 13.65 GB
Free space = 5.88 GB
Percent free space = 30 %

File fragmentation
Percent file fragmentation = 0 %
Total movable files = 68,794
Average file size = 224 KB
Total fragmented files = 0
Total excess fragments = 0
Average fragments per file = 1.00
Total unmovable files = 56

Free space fragmentation
Free space = 5.88 GB
Total free space extent = 7,694
Average free space per extent = 802 KB
Largest free space extent = 4.39 GB

Folder fragmentation
Total folders = 9,761
Fragmented folders = 1
Excess folder fragments = 0

Master File Table (MFT) fragmentation
Total MFT size = 73 MB
MFT record count = 68,929
Percent MFT in use = 92
Total MFT fragments = 3

Note: On NTFS volumes, file fragments larger than 64MB are not included
in the fragmentation statistics

Defragmentation report for volume D: My Stuff

Volume size = 130 GB
Cluster size = 4 KB
Used space = 71.43 GB
Free space = 58.09 GB
Percent free space = 44 %

File fragmentation
Percent file fragmentation = 0 %
Total movable files = 58,535
Average file size = 1 MB
Total fragmented files = 22
Total excess fragments = 708
Average fragments per file = 1.01
Total unmovable files = 10

Free space fragmentation
Free space = 58.09 GB
Total free space extent = 15,589
Average free space per extent = 4 MB
Largest free space extent = 19.03 GB

Folder fragmentation
Total folders = 6,461
Fragmented folders = 1
Excess folder fragments = 2

Master File Table (MFT) fragmentation
Total MFT size = 65 MB
MFT record count = 58,827
Percent MFT in use = 88
Total MFT fragments = 3

Note: On NTFS volumes, file fragments larger than 64MB are not included
in the fragmentation statistics

Defragmentation report for volume D: My Stuff

Volume size = 130 GB
Cluster size = 4 KB
Used space = 73.48 GB
Free space = 56.04 GB
Percent free space = 43 %

File fragmentation
Percent file fragmentation = 0 %
Total movable files = 58,535
Average file size = 1 MB
Total fragmented files = 0
Total excess fragments = 0
Average fragments per file = 1.00
Total unmovable files = 10

Free space fragmentation
Free space = 56.04 GB
Total free space extent = 16,302
Average free space per extent = 4 MB
Largest free space extent = 19.03 GB

Folder fragmentation
Total folders = 6,461
Fragmented folders = 1
Excess folder fragments = 0

Master File Table (MFT) fragmentation
Total MFT size = 65 MB
MFT record count = 58,827
Percent MFT in use = 88
Total MFT fragments = 3

Note: On NTFS volumes, file fragments larger than 64MB are not included
in the fragmentation statistics




"
.com wrote in message
...
I have been wondering why there were no replies to my post (my first,
ever).
In reading it, I realized A) that the subject doesn't indicate that it is
a
question, and B) that I omitted "GB" in the sentence that should have
read:
"The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37GB, for each of
two
runs for which I saved the analysis report.", and C) the post almost reads
as
though it is an answer to something, but I was only trying to give detail
on
how I found the problem.

I tried to ask Microsoft, but the webpage says to contact the OEM if Vista
was preinstalled. The response from the OEM didn't address the "problem".
Can
anyone help?

Thanks, Mike

" wrote:

Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line)
defrag c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the
lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?


  #10 (permalink)  
Old April 17th 07, 05:52 PM posted to microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintenance
Victoria House [MSFT]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 43
Default Defrag increases "used space" as reported by command-line defrag -

"
soft.com wrote in message
...
Why does defrag increase the disk's "used space"? This happens with both
the
GUI version, and the command-line version. The command line flag "-w"
results in a greater decrease in used space. I used (command line) defrag
c:
-a -v to generate a report, ran the GUI defrag, and then reran a report.
It
seems that the GUI version repeatably increases "used space" by about .7
GB.
The "free space" value sometimes doesn't show a decrease, due to the lower
precision of the number (no decimal values), and the amount of
fragmentation.
The command line version increased "used space" by 1.37, for each of two
runs that for which I saved the analysis report. The "free space" value
IS
reduced for the more aggressive defrag:
"defrag c: -w -v. Is this additional used space usable, or is it lost
forever, or until the disk is reformatted?





See
http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...g-is-cool.aspx

The blog says that defrag attempts to prevent copy-on-write by the Volume
Shadow copy Service (VSS) where possible.
Whenever this is not possible to prevent, VSS's diff space will increase,
decreasing available free space.

The space is not lost forever, it is being used to back up your files that
have "changed" according to VSS, due to their being moved around by defrag.
vssadmin.exe will tell you about your shadow storage space. There is a
default maximum allowed shadow storage space (15% of volume), so you needn't
fear your free space decreasing until there's none left.


-Victoria

 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On



All times are GMT. The time now is 05:54 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC6
Copyright ©2004-2012 Vista Banter.
The comments are property of their posters.