shearerc 0 Posted July 3, 2003 Hi all, Yesterday I formatted my non-system partition, D, in Win2K Command Prompt with this command: format d: /fs:ntfs Formatting went smoothly. Immediately after the format, I checked drive D's properties and was shocked to discover 51 megs of space have been taken up! 8) How could that be? Drive D was empty after formatting, no Recycle Bin, no System Volume Information, nothing. (yes, I set Explorer to show all hidden & system files) D partition is about 10 gigs in size and is healthy with NO bad sectors. Is this normal behaviour? Thanks for your help. Share this post Link to post
shearerc 0 Posted July 3, 2003 Big thanks for the quick reply. Yeah, I'm mighty glad to finally make the switch to ntfs; it's been LONG due, I delayed and delayed for months, years lol. Now playing around with the File & Folder Permissions-it's cool! Anyhow, do you have happen to know of any MS tech documents that explains why MFT can be so ugly big on NTFS partitions? I searched and searched.....found nothing of relevance Share this post Link to post
duhmez 0 Posted July 3, 2003 the MFT can be 8% or more of the total space 50 MB is nothing. dont worry about it. The zero byte thing is no theory either, for giggles i made a 100 MB ntfs prtition and filled it up that way. it as fun. One lousy command line can make the billions of 0 byte size files............. Share this post Link to post
jmmijo 1 Posted July 4, 2003 Quote: Big thanks for the quick reply. Yeah, I'm mighty glad to finally make the switch to ntfs; it's been LONG due, I delayed and delayed for months, years lol. Now playing around with the File & Folder Permissions-it's cool! Anyhow, do you have happen to know of any MS tech documents that explains why MFT can be so ugly big on NTFS partitions? I searched and searched.....found nothing of relevance I think this will help explain some of the basics of the MFThttp://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;174619 I would goto Microsoft's KB and select - All Microsoft Products - and then just use the keyword mft.http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=fh;[ln];kbhowto Share this post Link to post
shearerc 0 Posted July 4, 2003 Thanks to everyone who has been helpful. @jmmijo - that article is excellent, it explains the "weirdness", my gratitude to you. I need to spend some time brushing up my search skills too.... Share this post Link to post
jmmijo 1 Posted July 4, 2003 Quote: Thanks to everyone who has been helpful. @jmmijo - that article is excellent, it explains the "weirdness", my gratitude to you. I need to spend some time brushing up my search skills too.... You're welcome my young padawan, now search will you hmmmmmm Share this post Link to post