@ MrRon & MrG
When using "Defrag" or "Defrag Freespace" the result upon completion will frequently leave isolated or stranded used blocks on the drivemap and thus, I am assuming, on the actual drive. The "freespace" is not truly being defragged or "compacted". These stranded blocks are an issue as other files are saved to the drive and - much more importantly - as dynamic pagefile and/or MFT spaces grow these are by necessity fragmented around these stranded blocks.
Can this issue be addressed so that freespace is in fact defragged - or alternatively "compacted"...?
Stranded Blocks
Started by galileo, Oct 08 2008 03:58 PM
1 reply to this topic
#1 OFFLINE
Posted 08 October 2008 - 03:58 PM
#2 OFFLINE
Posted 09 October 2008 - 06:02 PM
I was just coming to the board to post on this same issue. I've tried defragging several times and can't get my drivemap to be solid. It has a dozen or so mixed blocks scattered about. Any way to resolve this?
galileo, on Oct 8 2008, 09:58 AM, said:
@ MrRon & MrG
When using "Defrag" or "Defrag Freespace" the result upon completion will frequently leave isolated or stranded used blocks on the drivemap and thus, I am assuming, on the actual drive. The "freespace" is not truly being defragged or "compacted". These stranded blocks are an issue as other files are saved to the drive and - much more importantly - as dynamic pagefile and/or MFT spaces grow these are by necessity fragmented around these stranded blocks.
Can this issue be addressed so that freespace is in fact defragged - or alternatively "compacted"...?
When using "Defrag" or "Defrag Freespace" the result upon completion will frequently leave isolated or stranded used blocks on the drivemap and thus, I am assuming, on the actual drive. The "freespace" is not truly being defragged or "compacted". These stranded blocks are an issue as other files are saved to the drive and - much more importantly - as dynamic pagefile and/or MFT spaces grow these are by necessity fragmented around these stranded blocks.
Can this issue be addressed so that freespace is in fact defragged - or alternatively "compacted"...?












