Has anybody ever done that? What does it mean if it gets really large?
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Has anybody ever done that? What does it mean if it gets really large?
A friend of mine deleted his swap file and had to reformat 'cause his computer wouldn't boot.
I use a fixed swap file of 250mb so it doesn't get fragmented. Anyway, it's impossible to delete the swap file while Windows is running, and even if you delete it when Windows isn't there, it'll just recreate it next time round.
Chances are 9 times out of 10 your system will go belly-up.:eek:
Just tried it. Restarted in MS-DOS mode, deleted D:\win386.swp, then restarted. No problems, and the file was silently recreated.
How do you use a fixed swap file? :confused:Quote:
Originally posted by parksie
I use a fixed swap file of 250mb so it doesn't get fragmented. Anyway, it's impossible to delete the swap file while Windows is running, and even if you delete it when Windows isn't there, it'll just recreate it next time round.
I'll talk to my friend again and ask what else he did.... :confused:Quote:
Just tried it. Restarted in MS-DOS mode, deleted D:\win386.swp, then restarted. No problems, and the file was silently recreated.
Parksie's right...
Dennis -- set the maximum and minimum values to the same thing (uncheck "Let windows sort it all out for me" or whatever it's called ;))
However, make sure that this will leave you with enough virtual memory (swapfile size + physical) to run everything you need. Also, if you have more than one drive, defragment one before putting the swap on it so that it's in contiguous space (speed).
Whoever said your computer goes wrong if you delete it is lying (or at least mis-informed).
Can ur delete a swap file??? i am not able to...
:confused:
You can't delete it while Windows is running because it's constantly in use. You have to exit Windows and go back to DOS.
Maybe the person who deleted the swap file and screwed up their system didn't have very much ram (8-16mb) in their system?
SD
I've run Win98 on 4mb so I doubt that's the case.
That 4mb....Uhhh....That's a typo right?Quote:
Originally posted by parksie
I've run Win98 on 4mb so I doubt that's the case.
Nope. Runs like *****e, but it runs :p
HaHa....I bet...:D
A long time ago when about 32Mb RAM was the norm, I had a mate who had a 4mb machine. I used to joke that my printer had more ram!! (which it did - 16Mb LaserJet). :D
Of course now I have a printer that's got it's own hard drive!!!
If you have a seperate partition with the swap on it (a la Linux) then you can make your system very unhappy by deleting that partition. In Windows, if you simply delete the file, it shouldn't care, it will make it again. That file is used only when Windows is running (when you can't delete it).
Why would you want to delete it???
Because you are a virus payload with orders to render a system inoperable in the most grand of manners.
'Course, you are now a very impotent payload.
Can anyone help my mate?
He's running RAID(1) and he's lost his FAT somehow. It's not Chernobyl virus, cos his BIOS works fine (both chips on the Duel BIOS). Is there a way he can get the data off his disk?
Is the FAT backup intact? If both copies are gone then you have no chance, and will need some severe trickery to get anything. You might be able to get something by looking at the area on the disk with the FAT.
I think the whole of partition 0 has gone, or it might be only half of it, seeing as he is running RAID striping over two HDs. Don't cops have machines for retrieving data of HDs, no matter how badly you ***** them up, as long as you don't delete and overwrite the data you want:rolleyes:.
Nothing will happen. Windows will simply create a new swap file on the next boot. However, as has already been mentioned, you can't delete it with windoze running. Boot to DOS, (press <F8> when the pc says Starting Windows), type cd windows (if windows is the OS directory), then del win386.swp. I've done it on numerous occasions, usually after a severe crash.
The swap file will normally zero itself when windows is shut down, but if an error occurs, it can just hang there wasting space.
Of course you did that solely for bragging rights:DQuote:
Originally posted by parksie
I've run Win98 on 4mb so I doubt that's the case.
I wanted to see what would happen :DQuote:
Originally posted by nishantp
Of course you did that solely for bragging rights:D
The first time I actually tried to use anything was Win95 beta 1 on 4mb, and that actually worked quite well.
Contradiction in terms there Mr Parks :- Windows running well.
:D
:DQuote:
Originally posted by ricmitch_uk
Contradiction in terms there Mr Parks :- Windows running well.
:D