Jim Hurley Posted October 12, 2022 Share Posted October 12, 2022 (edited) Today I was running a CHKDSK on my D drive which is where I have all my music projects and paths in Cakewalk. While waiting for it to complete, I opened Cakewalk without thinking and it automatically created all these folders in my AppData folder on C because D was unmounted during the scan. Realizing my mistake I changed all the paths in preferences, reset my project folders, reset the default templates, etc. It took a while. Quite a while. Maybe a warning before making all these changes would be helpful? EDIT: I use in an admin shell the command: "CHKDSK /F /R /B D:" to find all disk errors in files and unused space. This unmounts D Edited October 13, 2022 by Jim Hurley Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bvideo Posted October 12, 2022 Share Posted October 12, 2022 What format is your D drive? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Hurley Posted October 12, 2022 Author Share Posted October 12, 2022 (edited) It's a solid state GPT drive formatted NTFS. Edited October 12, 2022 by Jim Hurley Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bvideo Posted October 13, 2022 Share Posted October 13, 2022 Interesting - when I go to start a disk check from properties->tools[check] on an NTFS drive, it says: " You can keep using the drive during the scan. If errors are found you can decide if you want to fix them." That makes it sound like it's not unmounted. Perhaps you are using CHKDSK differently for a special purpose. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jim Hurley Posted October 13, 2022 Author Share Posted October 13, 2022 (edited) That probably just uses the format: CHKDSK /f <drive> I use an administrative prompt: CHKDSK /f /r /b <drive> /f - fix simple errors /r - locate and relocate bad sectors in user files /b - find bad clusters in unused areas of the drive Edited October 13, 2022 by Jim Hurley Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hockeyjx Posted October 14, 2022 Share Posted October 14, 2022 I'd say just don't run administrative system functions and try to run any programs. When I want to perform any maintenance, I do it as the last thing to ensure I don't touch something that may get in the way. Sucks when that kind of thing happens, but I don't know if it is CbB's responsibility for that - though I can see the usefulness of it telling you it can't find your existing paths. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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