4 GIGS found by chkdsk?

G

Guest

(I originally posted this to the wrong group)

I just set up my second laptop and plugged in my USB External HD. The
laptop ran chkdsk at startup. I finally had to unplug the HD to get it to
quit. Then it booted up.

Now I see that there's a folder on the External HD called "FOUND.000".
It has 4 GIGS worth of *.chk files in it.

Can anybody explain what this is, how it happened, and what I should do
about it?
 
S

Shenan Stanley

(I originally posted this to the wrong group)

I just set up my second laptop and plugged in my USB External
HD. The laptop ran chkdsk at startup. I finally had to unplug the
HD to get it to quit. Then it booted up.

Now I see that there's a folder on the External HD called
"FOUND.000". It has 4 GIGS worth of *.chk files in it.

Can anybody explain what this is, how it happened, and what I
should do about it?

See the response in microsoft.public.security...
 
W

Wesley Vogel

chk files and the Found folders

On Fat formatted volumes.

Chkdsk saves each repaired file in the root folder as a File<nnnn>.chk file,
and each repaired folder in the root folder as a Found.<nnn> folder, where
<n> is a number.

Recovering Lost Clusters on FAT Volumes
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/...Windows/XP/all/reskit/en-us/prkd_tro_kbnn.asp

Link is no good anymore!!!

[[Because some repairs on FAT volumes, such as correcting lost clusters
(also known as allocation units) or cross-linked files, change the volume's
file allocation table and can cause data loss, Chkdsk first prompts you with
a confirmation message similar to the following:

10 lost allocation units found in 3 chains.
Convert lost chains to files? (Y/N)

If you press the N key, Windows XP Professional fixes the errors on the
volume but does not save the contents of the lost clusters.

If you press the Y key, Windows XP Professional attempts to identify the
folder to which they belong. If the folder is identified, the lost cluster
chains are saved as files.

If Windows XP Professional cannot identify the folder or if the folder does
not exist, it saves each chain of lost clusters in a folder called
Found.xxx, where xxx is a sequential number starting with 000. If no folder
Found.000 exists, one is created at the root. If one or more sequential
folders called Found.xxx (starting at 000) exist, a folder that uses the
next number in the sequence is created.

Windows XP Professional creates Found.xxx folders as hidden system folders.
To see a list of Found.xxx folders, at the root folder in the command
prompt, type dir /a. For information about viewing hidden system folders in
My Computer or Windows Explorer, see Windows XP Professional Help.

After the storage folder has been identified or created, one or more files
with a name in the format Filennnn.chk are saved. (The first saved file is
named File0000.chk, the second is named File0001.chk, and so on in
sequence.) When Chkdsk finishes, you can examine the contents of these files
with a text editor such as Notepad to see whether they contain any needed
data (if the converted chains came from corrupted binary files, they are of
no value). You can delete the .chk files after you save any useful data.

Caution
Because other programs might create and use files with the .chk extension,
you must be careful to delete only the .chk files that are in the Found.xxx
folders.]]

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In
 

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