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Windows XP goes disk bound on start up


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Shortly after I start using the PC the disk seems to be driven 100% and the screen and mouse become very slow. Someimes this is obviously caused by downloading updates but usually not. This state can last for 15 or 20 minutes and happens after hibernating and after a fresh start. Subsequently, performance is fine.

The only programs I believe to be running are Firefox and Outlook. Taskmanager shows the cpu is idle typically 95%.

I have tried archiving emails and removing a large folder of music, putting it into another user's account. I have also defragged the disk which is 75% empty.

Is there anyway I can find out what is going on and stop it?

Any help would be very gratefully received.

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This could be an indexing service - Windows or some other program trying to be helpful and organizing your hard drive for you.

I find these helpers more of a nuisance than they're worth unless you have a business machine with loads and loads of small files.

Have a look around for Indexing Service and turn them off.

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Thank you for that. The suggestion seems highly plausible, though i don't understand why any decent indexing would appear to start from scratch each time.

I have found:

computer management/services and applications/services/Indexing Service but it has a start up type "manual" so I assume that is not the guilty party.

also

computer management/services and applications/services/Indexing Service and below this both "System" and "Visio". It isn't obvious what these are or if they are active. I don't use Visio, though I may have tried it once in the past, and I don't use Microsoft Index as far as I know. Can I safely turn these all off and if so how?

I do use google desktop search. Might it be the problem? I have not knowingly provoked it by re-indexing.

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That ran without finding anything. I wonder if it scanned the complete system or only my own files. I do have the system set up for two other users, so there are other files, but this is no particular reason to be concerned, one is used by me when I work on a large collection of music and the other (seldom) by my daughter.

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I have run chkdsk in read only mode with the following report (retyped by me so I hope without introducing errors other than the caps).

The type of the file system is NTFS.

WARNING! F parameter not specified.

Running CHKDSK in read-only mode.

CHKDSK is verifying files (stage 1 of 3)…

File verification completed.

CHKDSK is verifying indexes (stage 2 of 3)…

Index verification completed.

CHKDSK is recovering lost files.

CHKDSK is verifying security descriptors (stage 3 of 3)…

security descriptor verification completed.

CHKDSK is verifying Usn journal…

Usn journal verification completed

CHKDSK discovered free space marked as allocated in the master file table (MFT) bitmap.

Correcting errors in the Volume Bitmap.

Windows found problems with the file system.

Run CHKDSK with the /F (fix) OPTION TO CORRECT THESE.

153059287 kb TOTAL DISK SPACE.

35956216 KB in 131011 files.

49824 KB in 17440 indexes.

0 KB in bad sectors.

Although it said it was correcting errors in the bitmap I wonder if it was doing so since it was running read only. Also, i wonder quite what problems windows found with the file system - more than the bitmap or not?

I shall run with the fix parameter as soon as I have completed a backup which is underway now.

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