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#1
tell me how to delete System Volume Information on D:
I delete it, but it stays there, nothing happened. How can I delete it?
And is it safe to do?
I delete it, but it stays there, nothing happened. How can I delete it?
And is it safe to do?
Windows needs that. Well, it certainly wants it.
See: http://indrajitc.wordpress.com/2008/...e-information/
System information is were your System Restore points and other stuff are stored.
The System Volume Information can get bloated pretty fast over time; mainly by installing and uninstalling programs.
Open the Disk Cleanup utility, go to the More Options tab and and Cleanup the System Restore.
it will delete all your restore points except the last one.
moontan
You can set the max allocated space in System Volume Information for each disk by System Restore.
Open the Control Panel and click System, or right-click on Computer / Properties. The System window will open, where you can see your WEI, comp name, etc. On the left click on System protection to open that dialog. One by one select each drive under Protection Settings and click Configure. There you can select the max amount it will use for the drive's System Volume Information folder, or none at all. I only enable it for my system drive.
Highlight is mine
You need to be careful with this on multi drive/partition systems as the System volume information also holds the shadow copy data for Files in addition to the restore points. I would recommend that for a data drive you use a setting such as shown in the following screen (The percentage would be based on the amount of files you work with and the overall drive size) ...
This will provide some protection for your data, although I agree that the system restore on a data drive is not of any use as the system restore ignores data files.
The ammount required for a system drive is variable from system to system and is best set by observation - delete all but the last restore point and check the size then set the max to this figure times how many points you want to retain. 3-5 times is a good compromise (personal preference will decide the actual amount of restore points you wish to keep)
I have disabled system protection (system restore) on drive D, but it's still standing.