- Windows Backup Utility -- Files Size Problem
- Posted by Eric B. on March 30th, 2006
I recently bought an 80 GB external drive to use as a backup to my computer.
I ran XP's Backup Utility and directed it to send files and folders to the
new drive. I am only backing up about 10.1 GB, but received the following
error (not sure why, since the new drive is 80 GB!):
You have either run out of space, or the backup file (*.bkf) is too large
for this disk.
Note: If this disk is formatted with FAT 32, the maximum possible size for
the backup file is limited to 4GB.
The backup operation will stop.
- Posted by Ted Zieglar on March 30th, 2006
Is the drive formatted with FAT32?
--
Ted Zieglar
"A fool and his data are soon parted."
"Eric B." <Eric B.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
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- Posted by Eric B. on March 30th, 2006
Ted -- I'm not sure. It was a CompUSA private-label external hard drive with
no documentation, manual, etc. How can I tell if it is FAT 32, and if it is,
do I need to change some setting? Thanks for your help
"Ted Zieglar" wrote:
- Posted by Ted Zieglar on March 30th, 2006
With the drive plugged in, go to My Computer and right-click on the icon for
the drive, selecting Properties. The General tab will tell you what file
system the drive has.
--
Ted Zieglar
"A fool and his data are soon parted."
"Eric B." <EricB@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
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- Posted by Eric B. on March 30th, 2006
Ted -- the drive does have an FAT 32 system -- what does that mean and what
do I need to do in order to use it for backup?
thanks again,
Eric
"Ted Zieglar" wrote:
- Posted by Ted Zieglar on March 30th, 2006
The FAT32 file system supports a maximum file size of 4GB. IIRC, your backup
file is 10GB. To store a file that large, you will need to convert your
external drive to the NTFS file system.
Open the Help and Support Center and see the article: To convert a volume to
NTFS from the command prompt.
Note: The conversion process can take a long time. Do NOT interrupt it
before it is finished.
--
Ted Zieglar
"A fool and his data are soon parted."
"Eric B." <EricB@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:B86182CF-BF44-4B4F-99C5-F250982D1D93@microsoft.com...
- Posted by Eric B. on March 30th, 2006
Ted -- I thought we had it and I'm sorry to keep bugging you (Microsoft and
Dell each want to charge me $99.00 to do this!). When I followed your
instructions, I got the following at the command prompt:
The type of file system is FAT 32.
Enter current volume label for Drive F:
I'm not sure what to enter. When I went to the Help Center and looked at
the topic you recommended, it all seemed so easy. thanks
"Ted Zieglar" wrote:
- Posted by Ted Zieglar on March 31st, 2006
Don't worry about it. Lots of people think I'm a bugger.
For a more detailed explanation, try this:
"Converting FAT32 to NTFS in Windows XP"
http://aumha.org/win5/a/ntfscvt.php
--
Ted Zieglar
"A fool and his data are soon parted."
"Eric B." <EricB@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:C4CEA84B-6DE6-4CD4-B33F-A16E21BA137C@microsoft.com...