If a volume's dirty bit is set, this indicates that the file system may be
in an inconsistent state. The dirty bit can be set because the volume is
online and has outstanding changes, because changes were made to the volume
and the computer shutdown before the changes were committed to disk, or
because corruption was detected on the volume. If the dirty bit is set when
the computer restarts, chkdsk runs to verify the consistency of the volume.
When Autochk runs against a volume at boot time it records its output to a
file called Bootex.log in the root of the volume being checked. The Winlogon
service then moves the contents of each Bootex.log file to the Application
Event log. One event log message for each volume checked is recorded. So
check the application event log.
NDD is/was part of norton utilities not part of the operating system.
--
Regards,
Dave Patrick ....Please no email replies - reply in newsgroup.
Microsoft Certified Professional
Microsoft MVP [Windows]
http://www.microsoft.com/protect
<JoJo> wrote:
| Folks:
|
|
|
| * What functions are performed my the utility CHKDSK.EXE plus how it
| differs from Disk Cleanup ?
|
| Actually I was trying to move a bunch of 1Gig files from DVD to hard disk
| then burn fresh DVDs.
| I kept coming down with all sorts of errors until I ran CHKDSK.exe on hard
| drive. Seems to have
| done a great job on both files & hard drive. Successful burn after CHKDSK
| went to work..
|
| * In the window operating system, do we have OTHER utilities similar
| to chkdsk.exe ?
|
| * Is Norton Disk Doctor (NDD) still available on windows XP/2000
| system, maybe through the Command Prompt ?
|
|
|
|
| Thanks,
| Jo.
|
|