Stop chkdsk progress windows xp




















Since I was running chkdsk from the Administrator Command Prompt on an external hard drive I didn't need to do a hard restart. I just closed the command prompt. It seems to have not caused any damage. The files it claimed to have recovered are now accessible. So everything seems to have worked out. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Texkonc Jun 8, at UTC. Ghost Chili. Tim This person is a verified professional.

This is a boot time scan, so this does not apply. AIUI there is not and stopping it with a lack of power would be a bad idea Ah so. In this case the result would be exactly the same as hard reset. Thai Pepper. TheSteward This person is a verified professional. Revaan wrote: In that case tell the employee s he's responsible for any damage to the disk.

Then dole out some punishment, like making patch cables all day 3rd party contractor, who will not be paid for his added time waiting for the PC to boot. Unfortunately the 38 effected staff and clients were my bigger concern. How much was he charging if you don't mind my asking? Hopefully you were able to get things going the way you need now.

RobJ wrote: Hopefully you were able to get things going the way you need now. We have manual systems, so it was sucky, but not life ending. Oh well at least I get lots of time off with school vacations. RobJ wrote: Darn it. Robert This person is a verified professional. Robert wrote: Hope that your system got fixed. I already know it was not needed, and this was confirmed by it not finding errors!

Khardiss Jun 9, at UTC. Tim wrote: 3rd party contractor, who will not be paid for his added time waiting for the PC to boot. Besides, if you had to walk him thru the resolution, you shouldn't be paying him at all. When the computer boots up with the dirty bit enabled on a drive, you will be asked to check the disk for consistency before Windows is loaded. But sometimes Windows might keep running check disk automatically on every reboot and this could be quite annoying.

To stop the automatic disk check, you have to clear the dirty bit by following this tutorial: How to Manually Clear or Set Dirty Bit on Windows Volume. You can cancel the scheduled disk check using either Command Prompt or Registry Editor. Open a Command Prompt as an administrator. If you want to disable a scheduled disk check on C: drive, type the following command and press Enter.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000