Vista undeleteable file
Moderator: Thanas
Vista undeleteable file
I have a file that Will Not Die. It won't move or copy either, but it's just a Mass Effect trailer so I'm fine with deleting it. It also say's it's 12.3Mb when it's really about 50. Telling it to delete gives me the 'deleting' window and never goes anywhere. Right clicking on it takes about a million years to open the menu pane. Clicking properties crashes explorer.
I'm curious how this happened, because it's fucking annoying. I'm also interested in ideas of how I can get this shit the fuck off my computer.
I'm curious how this happened, because it's fucking annoying. I'm also interested in ideas of how I can get this shit the fuck off my computer.
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Have you tried using the command prompt to delete it? Also, I've found that Vista is notorious about having some files taking up system resources. So it may be that you just need to reboot.
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
Sigh. I don't mean to sound rude, but when someone says 'have you tried command prompt' and 'reboot', I just want to fucking stab them. Yes, I've fucking tried the command prompt. Yes, I've rebooted. What am I, a monkey? My first option when confronted with a problem is not to ask people who might say 'hmm try rebooting', sorry.
It won't delete in safe mode, I'm clean of viruses and spyware, and nothing is running that is holding it open. I tried unlocker, and it gave me a permissions debug error. I've run scandisk, I've tried copying a known-good copy over the same file, all with no success. The file plays fine (it jumps a bit at the start), but I can't find anything that will allow me to change anything about it.
It seems obvious that the file is simply corrupt and I can't write to it. Is there a tool to let me just remove it from the filesystem? And don't say 'lol del lol'.
It won't delete in safe mode, I'm clean of viruses and spyware, and nothing is running that is holding it open. I tried unlocker, and it gave me a permissions debug error. I've run scandisk, I've tried copying a known-good copy over the same file, all with no success. The file plays fine (it jumps a bit at the start), but I can't find anything that will allow me to change anything about it.
It seems obvious that the file is simply corrupt and I can't write to it. Is there a tool to let me just remove it from the filesystem? And don't say 'lol del lol'.
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My next stab at it would be to run Chkdsk /f (which will require a restart) and then try deleting it.
Alternatively, maybe try deleting it while running in Safe Mode?
Alternatively, maybe try deleting it while running in Safe Mode?
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I already did that. Unless chkdsk /f is different to the 'schedule scandisk' thing (which I doubt, since it appears scandisk=chkdsk these days). It didn't turn anything up.Uraniun235 wrote:My next stab at it would be to run Chkdsk /f (which will require a restart) and then try deleting it.
Alternatively, maybe try deleting it while running in Safe Mode?
Deleting in safe mode (as mentioned above) didn't work. I get the same 'sit on deleting window' result as usual.
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Does Move on Boot work in Vista? Worth a shot anyway.
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Eh, those options always worked whenever I've come across a file that wouldn't delete (which very rarely happens).Stark wrote:Sigh. I don't mean to sound rude, but when someone says 'have you tried command prompt' and 'reboot', I just want to fucking stab them. Yes, I've fucking tried the command prompt. Yes, I've rebooted. What am I, a monkey? My first option when confronted with a problem is not to ask people who might say 'hmm try rebooting', sorry.
It won't delete in safe mode, I'm clean of viruses and spyware, and nothing is running that is holding it open. I tried unlocker, and it gave me a permissions debug error. I've run scandisk, I've tried copying a known-good copy over the same file, all with no success. The file plays fine (it jumps a bit at the start), but I can't find anything that will allow me to change anything about it.
It seems obvious that the file is simply corrupt and I can't write to it. Is there a tool to let me just remove it from the filesystem? And don't say 'lol del lol'.
Just as one more possibly silly "obvious" option, have you tried moving the file to a different directory before hitting the delete button, as opposed to copying a "good" file onto the bad one?
"It's you Americans. There's something about nipples you hate. If this were Germany, we'd be romping around naked on the stage here."
I hate to sound like a crankypants, but my very first post says I can't move it.
There's got to be a soft out there to just zap it off the filesystem. No checks, no examinations, just remove the entry and huzzah. I don't want a zombie video on my desktop!
EDIT - Mordius, that's an interesting idea, I'll give it a go. I've tried safe mode though, which suggests it's not being 'held open'. Anyway, thanks for the suggestion.
There's got to be a soft out there to just zap it off the filesystem. No checks, no examinations, just remove the entry and huzzah. I don't want a zombie video on my desktop!
EDIT - Mordius, that's an interesting idea, I'll give it a go. I've tried safe mode though, which suggests it's not being 'held open'. Anyway, thanks for the suggestion.
It's also possible that you might be stuck with that file until Microsoft releases a patch to fix the problem. Undeletable files on Vista as well as inability to move files is a known Vista problem that has been fairly widespread but has not affected all systems. You can probably find more information from MS support pages and forums. I have no idea how to fix that, but the general impression I got from the articles I read (admittedly a few months back) was that if the problem manifests, the user is fucked.
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Oh I see. Thanks for the heads-up, I'll stop wasting my time. I'd pretty much exhausted all my options before I posted, so perhaps I'll just wait for a fix.Edi wrote:It's also possible that you might be stuck with that file until Microsoft releases a patch to fix the problem. Undeletable files on Vista as well as inability to move files is a known Vista problem that has been fairly widespread but has not affected all systems. You can probably find more information from MS support pages and forums. I have no idea how to fix that, but the general impression I got from the articles I read (admittedly a few months back) was that if the problem manifests, the user is fucked.
A last idea is use Process Explorer to search to see if anything has a handle to it open, and forcefully close that handle.
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Oh wait! I remember what I did when I had something like this in XP! (or was it 2K...)
Open a command prompt and Task Manager. Navigate to where the file is in the command prompt and get ready to delete the file. Using Task Manager, end the explorer.exe process. Then try deleting the file through the command prompt.
When you're done, whether or not it was successful, you can go to File -> Run in Task Manager and type in Explorer and your desktop should come right back.
Open a command prompt and Task Manager. Navigate to where the file is in the command prompt and get ready to delete the file. Using Task Manager, end the explorer.exe process. Then try deleting the file through the command prompt.
When you're done, whether or not it was successful, you can go to File -> Run in Task Manager and type in Explorer and your desktop should come right back.
"There is no "taboo" on using nuclear weapons." -Julhelm
What is Project Zohar?
"On a serious note (well not really) I did sometimes jump in and rate nBSG episodes a '5' before the episode even aired or I saw it." - RogueIce explaining that episode ratings on SDN tv show threads are bunk
"On a serious note (well not really) I did sometimes jump in and rate nBSG episodes a '5' before the episode even aired or I saw it." - RogueIce explaining that episode ratings on SDN tv show threads are bunk
Yeah, I'd looked through already: no links to the file.Beowulf wrote:A last idea is use Process Explorer to search to see if anything has a handle to it open, and forcefully close that handle.
Heh, I've never tried doing anything while Explorer is gone - Vista brings it back pretty quick-smart, though. Worth a shot, though, and it's an interesting idea.U235 wrote:Oh wait! I remember what I did when I had something like this in XP! (or was it 2K...)
Open a command prompt and Task Manager. Navigate to where the file is in the command prompt and get ready to delete the file. Using Task Manager, end the explorer.exe process. Then try deleting the file through the command prompt.
When you're done, whether or not it was successful, you can go to File -> Run in Task Manager and type in Explorer and your desktop should come right back.
One more thing to attempt, although very similar to what you already tried so it probably won't work, is to open up notepad and just save the empty file over it. That sometimes succeeds and allows you to delete the empty file afterwards.
BTW, Unlocker doesn't seem to work under Vista, despite what the author claims. I've never managed to get something to close the handle with it. Use Process explorer.
BTW, Unlocker doesn't seem to work under Vista, despite what the author claims. I've never managed to get something to close the handle with it. Use Process explorer.
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Window's hasn't run ontop of real MSDOS for decadesFingolfin_Noldor wrote:Does this Vista still retain that old MSDOS prompt safe mode? Is this command prompt in the Vista itself?
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Win95/98/Me if I recall, had a 16 bit component that was in some ways tied to MSDOS. Incidentally, they came with MSDOS 7.0 and can be accessed if one presses the F8 key on start up and chooses the MSDOS prompt option.Resinence wrote:Window's hasn't run ontop of real MSDOS for decadesFingolfin_Noldor wrote:Does this Vista still retain that old MSDOS prompt safe mode? Is this command prompt in the Vista itself?
For XP, if I am not wrong, it was an emulation but it nevertheless provided a MSDOS like command prompt interface.
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Win98 came out almost 10 years ago, obviously "decades" was hyperbole
XP had a Dos emulator just like Vista does, but it's not part of the OS anymore and you cannot access it on startup. All of the WinNT line runs without the need of DOS, part of the reason microsoft adopted it for the clients as well as servers over Win32 (a mistake in my opinion, they should have just used a new CLI without the memory limitations of DOS, sometimes running without a GUI is useful). Vista has safe mode but all it does is load a different hardware profile that doesn't include non-MS drivers and disables some services.
XP had a Dos emulator just like Vista does, but it's not part of the OS anymore and you cannot access it on startup. All of the WinNT line runs without the need of DOS, part of the reason microsoft adopted it for the clients as well as servers over Win32 (a mistake in my opinion, they should have just used a new CLI without the memory limitations of DOS, sometimes running without a GUI is useful). Vista has safe mode but all it does is load a different hardware profile that doesn't include non-MS drivers and disables some services.
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My original idea was that in the MSDOS mode, very few services are running, and it might remove any possible conflicts that might otherwise exist.Resinence wrote:Win98 came out almost 10 years ago, obviously "decades" was hyperbole
XP had a Dos emulator just like Vista does, but it's not part of the OS anymore and you cannot access it on startup. All of the WinNT line runs without the need of DOS, part of the reason microsoft adopted it for the clients as well as servers over Win32 (a mistake in my opinion, they should have just used a new CLI without the memory limitations of DOS, sometimes running without a GUI is useful). Vista has safe mode but all it does is load a different hardware profile that doesn't include non-MS drivers and disables some services.
But you are right nonetheless.
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Your spirit, diseased as it is, refuses to allow you to give up, no matter what threats you face... and whatever wreckage you leave behind you.
Kreia
Your spirit, diseased as it is, refuses to allow you to give up, no matter what threats you face... and whatever wreckage you leave behind you.
Kreia
Come to think of it, the whole "lets remove the CLI or hide it so it's hard to find (looking at you apple)" is stupid, what? They think end users will trash their PC when they don't even know what a command is or how to get the CLI to do anything at all besides print "error command not found"? Or accidently boot into command prompt mode and not just restart the PC again?
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Worse comes to worse, boot using the Recover Console which you get when booting off the CD. It has a proto-OS (nothing more than the ability to move/delete files and switch a few hardcoded settings types).
Also scandisk (chkdsk.exe) can scan for bad sectors which might be why the file cant be deleted (chkdsk.exe /r). Either that or poll the harddrive's SMART status with something like HD Tune
Also scandisk (chkdsk.exe) can scan for bad sectors which might be why the file cant be deleted (chkdsk.exe /r). Either that or poll the harddrive's SMART status with something like HD Tune
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I had this same problem a few times in XP, don't know if this easy solution works in Vista thou. Don't try to delete the corrupted file, instead move all your other files in the same folder to a new folder which you can rename later. Now that you only have the corrupted file in the folder, try deleting the entire folder instead of the file. Most of the time this works in XP, well at least it's worth a try.
I had this issue with XP a while back. It was for the "Half-Life in 45 minutes" speedrun. The file pegged out at 500+ megabytes and was stuck on the root of my D: drive.
For some reason, after I cleaned out a bunch of other files and defragmented, XP let me delete it. I have no idea why and I could find nothing on the issue.
For some reason, after I cleaned out a bunch of other files and defragmented, XP let me delete it. I have no idea why and I could find nothing on the issue.