Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > Limit Size of Temp File
Limit Size of Temp File
Posted by David Schwartz on May 28th, 2008


My C drive was nearly full and I found that my Temp file (not Temp Internet
Files) had over 23GB of crap in it. Can I limit the size of this file?
Thanks


--
David Schwartz
Commack, NY


Posted by Terry R. on May 28th, 2008


The date and time was 5/27/2008 5:16 PM, and on a whim, David Schwartz
pounded out on the keyboard:

Hi David,

Exactly what "Temp file"? You may have a program that created it, but
it wasn't Windows. Windows creates temp files, as do most Windows
programs, and you're not talking about the paging file I presume.

Programs like Photoshop create working temp files, so it may be a
program like that you can set the limit on.

--
Terry R.

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Posted by David Schwartz on May 28th, 2008


Thanks, I think!


"Terry R." <F1Com@NOSPAMpobox.com> wrote in message
news:%23nCPPsFwIHA.420@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...


Posted by HeyBub on May 28th, 2008


David Schwartz wrote:
Temp FOLDER or a specific temporary file? If the latter, what's the name of
the file?

Many programs make use of the TEMP or TMP folder for temporary storage - and
then they don't clean up after themselves (bad program! sit in corner and
feel shame!). Almost always you can remove the contents of the TEMP or TMP
folder without a problem.

I know of no way to pre-limit the size of a TEMP folder. And, even if you
could, sure enough some program would fail since it wouldn't have the
ability to take care of it's temporary business.



Posted by VanguardLH on May 28th, 2008


"David Schwartz" wrote in <news:483ca43d$0$11612$607ed4bc@cv.net>:

No, you didn't find a temp file that was 23GB in size. Your TEMP
*folder* had files in it that consumed 23GB. So what files were in your
temp folder that was consuming all this space? You have a program that
is polluting your hard drive because it doesn't delete its temp files,
or your host is continually crashing so the application cannot delete
its files when it gets killed by the crash.

You can also use the disk cleanup wizard to occasionally cleanup your
hard disk, including temp files. Read Microsoft's KB article 315246 on
how to save the registry settings (sageset) that you can then specify
when you run a scheduled event in Task Scheduler to run the disk cleanup
wizard (cleanmgr.exe). Otherwise, just run the wizard once in awhile
yourself to cleanup the temp files scattered all over your hard disk.

Posted by Bill in Co. on May 28th, 2008


VanguardLH wrote:
It would be interesting to know what files consumed most of that space, as
that sure is a LOT (as in, excessive)!



Posted by Terry R. on May 28th, 2008


The date and time was 5/27/2008 7:56 PM, and on a whim, VanguardLH
pounded out on the keyboard:

Have you seen what the OP has seen? How can you state, "No, you didn't
find a temp file that was 23GB in size"? Unless he clarifies his
statement (which he didn't to me), we have to believe that is what his
issue is, regardless if it doesn't make sense. Since he knew enough to
say it wasn't "temp internet files", we also have to believe it wasn't
multiple files.

I have NEVER seen a workstation that didn't have a cleanup script (that
I always create), have less than hundreds of megs of files, if not gigs
sitting in the temp folders. Windows and the programs installed are
notorious for leaving this junk in a users temp folder.


--
Terry R.

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Posted by Bill in Co. on May 28th, 2008


It's easy enough for the OP to find out exactly WHAT is in the Temp folder,
and then manually delete it if he wants (in Windows Explorer), rather than
relying on some magic cleanup program to do it behind the scenes. You
don't really need CCleaner OR the Cleanup Manager or any "Wizards", with
just a little bit of effort. And that way you know EXACTLY what you are
doing and removing.


Terry R. wrote:


Posted by Nonny on May 28th, 2008


On Tue, 27 May 2008 23:19:35 -0600, "Bill in Co."
<not_really_here@earthlink.net> wrote:

The "magic" CCleaner program not only lets you configure what you want
it to check/cleanup, it also provides you with a list of what it is
about to cleanup when you activate the cleaner - giving you a choice
of doing it or not.

You can also configure it to check folders that it doesn't
automatically check on its own.

Very nice indeed. Saves time too.

Posted by Bill in Co. on May 28th, 2008


Nonny wrote:
Well, I did say "with a little bit of effort", and I sure don't mind doing
it myself, and actually prefer it that way, most of the time, rather than
relying on wizards and crutches. :-)



Posted by Nonny on May 28th, 2008


On Wed, 28 May 2008 01:04:20 -0600, "Bill in Co."
<not_really_here@earthlink.net> wrote:

You probably still stand in front of your car and manually turn the
engine over with a hand crank to start it.

The rest of the world prefers having an electric starter do that.

Posted by Gerry on May 28th, 2008


Bill

I agree with Nonny's comments regarding cCleaner. You configure what
cCleaner removes and you see a list of what is to be removed before you
confirm removal. It's more effective than the Microsoft Disk CleanUp.

I have no experience of Cleanup Manager and found out it existed by
Googling after I read your post.

--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Bill in Co. wrote:


Posted by Terry R. on May 28th, 2008


The date and time was 5/27/2008 10:19 PM, and on a whim, Bill in Co.
pounded out on the keyboard:

Maybe you meant to reply to someone else, but my reply didn't discuss,

"...some magic cleanup program to do it behind the scenes. You don't
really need CCleaner OR the Cleanup Manager or any "Wizards", with just
a little bit of effort. And that way you know EXACTLY what you are
doing and removing."

--
Terry R.

***Reply Note***
Anti-spam measures are included in my email address.
Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply.

Posted by Allen on May 28th, 2008


Nonny wrote:
faster that the MS file cleanup program. Since I installed CCleaner I've
run cleanmgr perhaps three times, just to see if CCleaner missed
anything. Between CCleaner and DoubleKiller, I keep my disks in pretty
clean condition.
Allen

Posted by Allen on May 28th, 2008


Terry R. wrote:
paper? That way, you would know EXACTLY what you are doing.
Allen

Posted by Gerry on May 28th, 2008


Allen

How do you manage to create the need for DoubleKiller?

--
~~~~


Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Allen wrote:


Posted by Gerry on May 28th, 2008


Allen

Some of us learnt mental arithmetic at school many years ago. It served
us well!

--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Allen wrote:


Posted by Nonny on May 28th, 2008


On Wed, 28 May 2008 19:40:50 +0100, "Gerry" <gerry@nospam.com> wrote:

I believe his comment was aimed at Binco.

Posted by Gerry on May 28th, 2008


Yes Nonny I realised that. Using Outlook Express the threading is easier
to see than if you use some web based news readers.


~~~~


Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Nonny wrote:


Posted by Allen on May 28th, 2008


Gerry wrote:
Allen


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