Page file

M

Mike Hall - MVP

As far as I am aware, the conditions for a drive/partition to have no letter
preclude putting anything there at all..


"Annie R J Brion" <no-reply@brion.me.invalid> wrote in message
news:eM%23vWNgyHHA.1188@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Can you have the page file on a disk partition that has no drive letter?
>
> --
> Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
> http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk


--


Mike Hall
MS MVP Windows Shell/User
http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/
 
U

UnswoleLilDude

It's not a good idea to move the paging file to a separate partition on the
same hard drive Windows is installed on. This will slow your computer down.

Learn more about the paging file in Windows Vista at the link below.

http://www.maximumpcguides.com/move-and-optimize-windows-vistas-paging-file/

--

MAXIMUMpcguides.com
Helping you get the MOST out of your Vista PC.

--

"Annie R J Brion" <no-reply@brion.me.invalid> wrote in message
news:eM%23vWNgyHHA.1188@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Can you have the page file on a disk partition that has no drive letter?
>
> --
> Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
> http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk
 
A

Annie R J Brion

UnswoleLilDude wrote:
> It's not a good idea to move the paging file to a separate partition on
> the same hard drive Windows is installed on. This will slow your
> computer down.
>
> Learn more about the paging file in Windows Vista at the link below.
>
> http://www.maximumpcguides.com/move-and-optimize-windows-vistas-paging-file/


The partition is the first on my second SATA. No one said I only had one
drive )

--
Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk
 
R

Richard Urban

But you didn't say you have more than one drive either! A small point, but
important to your question.

A partition that has no drive designation can not be accessed by the
operating system, regardless where it is located.

--


Regards,

Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
(For email, remove the obvious from my address)



"Annie R J Brion" <no-reply@brion.me.invalid> wrote in message
news:uGvzC9gyHHA.3768@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
> UnswoleLilDude wrote:
>> It's not a good idea to move the paging file to a separate partition on
>> the same hard drive Windows is installed on. This will slow your
>> computer down.
>>
>> Learn more about the paging file in Windows Vista at the link below.
>>
>> http://www.maximumpcguides.com/move-and-optimize-windows-vistas-paging-file/

>
> The partition is the first on my second SATA. No one said I only had one
> drive )
>
> --
> Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
> http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk
 
A

Annie R J Brion

Richard Urban wrote:
> But you didn't say you have more than one drive either! A small point,
> but important to your question.


How was it important? It did not matter where the partition is as your
answer below shows.

> A partition that has no drive designation can not be accessed by the
> operating system, regardless where it is located.


Ta. I'll have to waste a letter then :(

--
Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk
 
R

Richard Urban

It is important in the fact that moving the pagefile to another partition on
a computer that has only one drive does absolutely nothing for you. If you
had stated that you had a second drive your responses may have been a bit
more informative.

Please state all facts up front to prevent people from having to pull teeth
to get information from you.

See here please: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm

--


Regards,

Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User
(For email, remove the obvious from my address)

Quote from George Ankner:
If you knew as much as you think you know,
You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew!

"Annie R J Brion" <no-reply@brion.me.invalid> wrote in message
news:O4aK3ShyHHA.4800@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
> Richard Urban wrote:
>> But you didn't say you have more than one drive either! A small point,
>> but important to your question.

>
> How was it important? It did not matter where the partition is as your
> answer below shows.
>
>> A partition that has no drive designation can not be accessed by the
>> operating system, regardless where it is located.

>
> Ta. I'll have to waste a letter then :(
>
> --
> Annie___ (VM BB L)________________________________
> http://find-out-more.brion.me.uk - http://email-me.brion.me.uk
 
A

Andrew McLaren

"Mike Hall - MVP" <mikehall@mvps.org> wrote ...
> As far as I am aware, the conditions for a drive/partition to have no
> letter preclude putting anything there at all..


Not strictly true ... you can mount a formatted NTFS partition onto the
directory of another drive.

So for example: Disk 1 has one partiton, and is C: drive. Disk 2 has one
partition, and is mounted on C:\Users (or C:\MyData\Foobar\Baz, etc)
directory of Disk 1.

In Disk Manager, select the partition, and go to Change Drive Letter and
Paths, Change, Mount in the following empty NTFS Directory.

The second drive can now be accessed and used, without consuming a drive
letter.

Unfortunately this facility, although very cool, won't help Annie because
the page file must go into the Root directory of the drive. That's the one
directory that you can't mount another drive on.

Anyways, apologies for being a pedantic git ... but hell, I just couldn't
resist :)

--
Andrew McLaren
amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au
 
L

Lang Murphy

<snip>

> Anyways, apologies for being a pedantic git ... but hell, I just couldn't
> resist :)
>

<snip>

Now... if we could only relieve ourselves of the numerous pedantic gits in
residence here... oh, what a wonderful world it would be...

Lang
 
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