- C:/windows/system32/dllcsache(can it be safely deleted?)
- Posted by ManyBeers on October 31st, 2005
I was reading an article on a website concerning reducing the Windows
folder footprint, and in the article it is stated that the files(not the
folder) in the
C:/windows/system32/dllcache folder can safely be deleted.The author
says they are just backups of all system files and are not needed.
Anyways I ask because mine has over 500megs in it and all are blue meaning
the are old compressed files. Also what about deleting the files(not the
folder) in the C:/Windows/Servicepackfiles/i386 folder. I have SP2 on cd and
have no intention of removing it. Thanks
- Posted by Dr Teeth on October 31st, 2005
Do NOT delete this folder. It does indeed contain copies of many files
on your disc. Windows uses that folder to replace any system files
that have changed with the same version that is installed on your
system.
It is an important safety feature...leave it alone.
Also, I'd avoid a site that advocates deleting this folder.
--
Cheers,
Guy
** Stress - the condition brought about by having to
** resist the temptation to beat the living daylights
** out of someone who richly deserves it.
- Posted by Gerry Cornell on October 31st, 2005
Encore!
--
Regards.
Gerry
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FCA
Stourport, Worcs, England
Enquire, plan and execute.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Dr Teeth" <no.email.here.please@tardis.com> wrote in message
news:bqobm1t955q07nlleqc434aftl2cqgjd3a@4ax.com...
> Do NOT delete this folder. It does indeed contain copies of many files
> on your disc. Windows uses that folder to replace any system files
> that have changed with the same version that is installed on your
> system.
>
> It is an important safety feature...leave it alone.
>
> Also, I'd avoid a site that advocates deleting this folder.
>
> --
> Cheers,
>
> Guy
>
> ** Stress - the condition brought about by having to
> ** resist the temptation to beat the living daylights
> ** out of someone who richly deserves it.
- Posted by Gerry Cornell on October 31st, 2005
You would be ill advised to delete the contents of Windows back up
folders.
How large is your hard drive and how much free space does it have? If
your hard drive is partitioned then details for each partition would be
helpful.
You may be able to gain space on your C drive. Check how much Disk Space
is allocated to System Restore by right clicking on My Computer and
selecting Properties, System Restore, Settings. Also run Disk CleanUp
selecting More Options, System Restore and remove all restore points
except the most recent one.
--
Hope this helps.
Gerry
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FCA
Using invalid email address
Stourport, Worcs, England
Enquire, plan and execute.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"ManyBeers" <ManyBeers@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:F7FCBD73-955E-48B5-9CBC-2A65BCAB053D@microsoft.com...
>I was reading an article on a website concerning reducing the Windows
> folder footprint, and in the article it is stated that the files(not
> the
> folder) in the
> C:/windows/system32/dllcache folder can safely be deleted.The author
> says they are just backups of all system files and are not needed.
> Anyways I ask because mine has over 500megs in it and all are blue
> meaning
> the are old compressed files. Also what about deleting the files(not
> the
> folder) in the C:/Windows/Servicepackfiles/i386 folder. I have SP2 on
> cd and
> have no intention of removing it. Thanks
- Posted by ManyBeers on October 31st, 2005
"ManyBeers" wrote:
> I was reading an article on a website concerning reducing the Windows
> folder footprint, and in the article it is stated that the files(not the
> folder) in the
> C:/windows/system32/dllcache folder can safely be deleted.The author
> says they are just backups of all system files and are not needed.
> Anyways I ask because mine has over 500megs in it and all are blue meaning
> the are old compressed files. Also what about deleting the files(not the
> folder) in the C:/Windows/Servicepackfiles/i386 folder. I have SP2 on cd and
> have no intention of removing it. Thanks
Alrighty I guess I'll pass on my plans to delete those files.Majority rules.
Idon't really need the space: just like to be tidy.