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| Thread ID: 130119 | 2013-03-27 08:14:00 | Why am I loosing free disk space on my SSD? | mikelomb (17013) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1334287 | 2013-03-27 08:14:00 | When I installed Windows 8 64 bit version OEM on my computer I used a 64 GB SSD . I have two other 10,000 RPM HDDs for programs and back up . Installation should only be about 20 GB for this, and if nothing else is installed on this drive, that should be more than enough free space . It did not turn out that way, and more and more disk space was being consumed to the point that the Windows was highlighting that there was only 6 GB free space?! I ran the program ccleaner that that cleared a bit out, but levels started creeping up again . Checking on the Internet in a rather haphazard manner I discovered that there was something called a hiberfil . sys which is used as part of Windows 8 rapid start up times . By default its size is 75% of the RAM . Well when I built my computer I decided to fill the banks up as RAM is cheep so there is 16 GB in the system = 12 GB . You can just remove this by typing in the command prompt Powercfg h off Can go here for more details . howtogeek . com/howto/15140/what-is-hiberfil . sys-and-how-do-i-delete-it/" target="_blank">www . howtogeek . com You can turn it back on with Powercfg h on You can resize it with powercfg -h -size percentage Percentage here is the number so in my case I could choose something more sensible like 20 Well I am down to about 44 GB used on the SSD, so there is still more stuff, somewhere even with the deleted hiberfil . sys Restore points are another culprit, but I deleted that, and at any rate it was only allocated 1 GB . Does anyone have any idea where all this stuff is coming from if all I have is an operating system on the SSD? I have reinstalled Windows 8 several times, and the free space never stays free for long . |
mikelomb (17013) | ||
| 1334288 | 2013-03-27 08:35:00 | hiberfil.sys should always be a constant size, so that's not the cause of your free space issue. More likely it's Windows updates and Metro apps using up disk space. WinDirStat should be able to help you out. |
pcuser42 (130) | ||
| 1334289 | 2013-03-27 21:01:00 | Where is your page file ? It defaults to the OS drive but with a small SSD and a lot of RAM its better set to one of the other drives. I find 64 a bit too small myself, I managed ok with a 120 but I like to install my common programs and games on it . I now have a 256 with a lot of games on it as well as windows. |
dugimodo (138) | ||
| 1334290 | 2013-03-27 22:24:00 | 64G just may not be big enough your could try running a Win disk cleanup www.sevenforums.com itunes apps,tmps,installers can also gobble up GB's of space ON THE PC Google maps: Ive seen that leave alot on PC's HD's have a look at the size of winsxs in the Windows dir It all adds up, a Gig here, a gig there. +1 on windirstat , run it as administrator & use a 3rd party file explorer ( eg total commnder). Windows 7,8,server etc can actively hide files when using (file)explorer, even if you enable view all files. |
1101 (13337) | ||
| 1334291 | 2013-03-27 23:22:00 | As its been mention in earlier posts, you'll need to run some sort of viewer like windirstat. A fresh install of Windows 8 Pro x64, fully up to date with all current MS patches, no other programs installed comes in at 24GB (Just done it - making a master to sysprep and Image) |
wainuitech (129) | ||
| 1334292 | 2013-03-28 00:32:00 | Thank you for your input here. I ran Windirstat and yes the page file takes up 16GB of space. Installing Windows in the SSD seem analogous to a what is supposed to be a single person moving into a small flat, only to find that unexpected relatives are also moving in and taking up apartment space, and you cannot get rid of them. | mikelomb (17013) | ||
| 1334293 | 2013-03-28 02:32:00 | It's doable, my windows plus world of warcraft install came in just under 60 Gb and WoW is 22 Gb all by itself. I prefer more room for cat swinging though. Move your swap file. |
dugimodo (138) | ||
| 1334294 | 2013-03-28 03:07:00 | I survived on a 40GB SSD up until a year or so ago, not sure how :/ | pablo d (15490) | ||
| 1334295 | 2013-03-28 04:01:00 | I turned on the hibersys file again by using the command prompt (need to run this as administrator) Powercfg –h on By default Windows 8 set this to 8 GB (50% of my 16GB RAM) I tried to resize this by typing powercfg -h -size 20 This was to get the file to smaller size. No such luck, it remains stuck at 8GB I never heard of a page file till yesterday. It probably is not mentioned at the Windows 8 for Dummies level. There is an article I found on how to delete or resize the page file here. mywindows8.org However this is all sounding rather counter intuitive. The purpose of a SDD drive in the first place is to speed up performance at the hardware level. With restricted space though, you are compelled now to cripple the operative systems default speed enhancement features. I added another page file to another HDD, as there is acres of room in there anyway. I left things alone in the SDD. So now I have two page files and 16 GB of RAM. This sound rather redundant (maybe a good thing.) I have two 250 GB 10,000 RPM conventional drives in addition to the SDD. I think if I knew about all this in advance I would have stayed with larger mechanical drives only. My current state of affairs is about 9 GB free of 55.4 GB in the SSD Since I will not install any other programs in there that should remain free. Well maybe not. Windows 8 apps will probably install in C drive be default, and no option to change that. For those of you out there who are new to the technical details of this issue (like me), here is another instructive link. lifehacker.com All this messing about with the operating system reminds of the old days of DOS 3 (yes I am that old) where more time was spent messing around and tweaking the computer than doing anything useful with it. |
mikelomb (17013) | ||
| 1334296 | 2013-03-28 06:18:00 | hiberfil.sys is for Sleep and Hibernate modes so don't use these, turn them off. I don't understand why you are using these modes if you are short of space and they result in the generation of this very large file. |
zqwerty (97) | ||
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