Re: Unable to delete orphaned 1.5 GB System Restore folder
- From: Malke <notreally@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 21 May 2006 05:42:15 -0700
Steven L Umbach wrote:
"puzzled and frustrated"
<puzzledandfrustrated@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:83835395-D937-4B33-88CA-EA43EDB1DEDE@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
That advice was no help at all. I have FULL CONTROL over the entire
C: drive
and all subdirectories, imcluding C:/TEMP.
You did not give any info on if you checked file permissions or not.
That would be a suspected reason. By the way just becaue you have full
control at the root folder does not mean that you have full control on
all folders/files on the drive. Folders/files can have explicitly
defined permissions instead of inherited permissions with the system
volune information folder being a perfect example of one and by
default only system has permissions to that folder. If there is one
file in a folder that you do not have fullcontrol/modify permission
then you can not delete the folder.
I don't need instruction in basic Windoze file ownership andFile attributes have absolutely nothing to do with the ability to
permissions. I
am the OWNER of that file and have full permissions according to
Windows
Explorer. Using the attrib command does more than you suggested
because it
allows the System bit to be taken off of a file or folder. Even that
doesn't
help.
delete a file - you are wasting your time dealing with them. If you
have effective delete permissions for a file and the file is not being
used by a process and the file is not corrupt nor is using an illegal
name or a few other obscure reasons you should be able to delete it.
XP Pro treats the System Restore files with some type of special
protection
similar to the way they prevent you from deleting crucial system
files. Instead of general advice on how to delete files and change
ownership and permissions, i need information specific to how XP
"protects" the System Restore files and how to turn that off for
files no longer used by System Restore.
See if you can delete any files and or child folders. It could be just
a couple files causing the problem. From the parent folder try going
into the security properties/advanced and then select "replace
permisions entries on all child objects". You could also try deleting
from the command line using system by using the AT command to schedule
the delete command in the future by a couple minutes. Or use the AT
command to open the command window to try using delete which also be
running as system which can be verified by Task manager. Tasks
scheduled by the AT command run as system.
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;313565 ---
using the AT command
Does anyone know how to override that "protection"? Gimme a break.
You're
telling me to run CHKDSK when i said the orphaned file is over a year
old and
i've posted that two different versions of Linux won't let me delete
those
files and their folders. It says "ACCESS DENIED."
One single corrupt file could cause the failure where the operating
system can not interpret the security descriptors. Running Check Disk
with the option to automatically fix file system errors often can fix
such a problem. Offhand I don't know why linux did not work but for
any operating system you need permissions to delete files and
root/administrator may not always have such. I like using Bart's PE
better in such situations and it also allows me to edit the registry
of another Windows operating system when I need to. The link below
from Microsft may be helpful in dealing with files you can not
delete. --- Steve
Steve - If the OP wasn't using an unsupported tool such as Captive on
Linux , then it is completely unsurprising that he couldn't delete the
files from within Linux. All those live cd's such as Knoppix mount the
drives read-only which is A Good Thing. It is not recommended to try
and write to - or delete from - a partition/drive formatted NTFS. Since
the OP has extensively mentioned permissions, I think we can rule out
FAT32. So the OP isn't quite as computer-savvy as he thinks he is.
As you say, there is probably a permissions issue and a Bart's PE or
even ERD Commander (if the OP is rich) should take care of the problem.
Of course, the quick and dirty solution would be to back up the data and
clean-install Windows. Since the OP yells at people who are trying to
help him when they make a suggestion that he might not be as
knowledgeable as he thinks he is, I won't bother to include my usual
links to clean-install instructions.
Malke
--
MS-MVP Windows User/Shell
Elephant Boy Computers
www.elephantboycomputers.com
"Don't Panic"
.
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