Tracking

Apr 15, 2008

This has become one of the biggest
problems with users who made the switch to Windows Vista and have
limited disk space. Unlike System Restore in Windows XP, you could
adjust the amount of disk usage from XP's Ststem Restore utility.

Vista's System Restore keeps two types of restore points, one for
shadow copies of files used to restore previous versions of a file that
you want to recover due to corruption or deleting of files, and the
typical restoring of a previoius saved system state. System Restore
uses up to 15% of each NTFS drive on the system that is at least 1 GB.

To determine how much disk space System Restore is using, the following command can be used:

vssadmin list shadowstorage



For the above command to run you must use elevated privileges:

Click on the Start menu then click All Programs / Accessories

Right Click on the Command Prompt option and from the drop down menu click on the Run as Administrator option

At the command prompt type vssadmin list shadowstorage and Press Enter
(NOTE: if the command does not run change directories to
c:windowssystem32)

After the vssadmin has executed you will see results similar to the following:

Used Shadow Copy Storage space: 237.419 MB

Allocated Shadow Copy Storage space: 400 MB

Maximum Shadow Copy Storage space: 2.092 GB

The output above shows space used on the C: drive by System Restore is 237.419 MB.



The maximum space allocated for System restore is 2.092 GB

To view the number of restore points you currently have on your Computer run the following command



vssadmin list shadows



Next, to reduce the allocated space used by Vista's System Restore, use the following command:



vssadmin resize shadowstorage /on=[OnVolumeSpec:] /for=[ForVolumeSpec:] /maxsize=[MaxSizeSpec]



Where



OnVolumeSpec: is the drive letter, for examaple C

ForVolumeSpec: is the drive letter, for example C

MaxSizeSpec: is the maximum size you want System Restore to use, example 1GB



example: vssadmin resize shadowstorage /On=C: /For=C: /Maxsize=1GB



When decreasing the space allocated to System Restore, you will loose
the earlier system restore points. The advantage is gaining extra free
space. If you are concerned with losing the previous restore points,
wait until you do not need them anymore before reducing the allocated
space.



If you plan on upgrading to Windows Vista or running a clean install
and will need extra space, consider reducing the space after
installation has completed.



It is not recommended to disable System Restore. The capability to
restore to a previous point in time or having the new Shadow Copy
feature available can be a time saver if something goes wrong or if you
delete a file.










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