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Hardware
Hardware Troubleshooting
Check Disk runs at every reboot
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<blockquote data-quote="shmu26" data-source="post: 828344" data-attributes="member: 37647"><p>It runs at every reboot but finishes after a few seconds, then Windows loads normally.</p><p>C drive is on SSD.</p><p></p><p>In command prompt I ran</p><p>C:\WINDOWS\system32>fsutil dirty query c:</p><p>And I got</p><p>Volume - c: is Dirty</p><p></p><p>I tried the following, substituting c: where it says g: but the issue was not resolved.</p><p></p><p>If your Check Disk or chkdsk tool in Windows runs on every boot, here are a few things you may want to try.</p><p>1. First of all, let it run once completely.</p><p>2. Now open the Registry Editor and navigate to the following registry key:</p><p></p><p>In the right pane, you will see BootExecute. Change its value from <em><strong>autocheck autochk * /.</strong></em> to <strong>autocheck autochk *</strong></p><p><img src="https://thewindowsclub-thewindowsclubco.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/bootexecute-value-2.jpg" alt="Check Disk runs at every startup" class="fr-fic fr-dii fr-draggable " style="" /></p><p><em>If this works for you great, else try this :</em></p><p>3. Open a command prompt windows, type the following and hit Enter:</p><p></p><p>fsutil dirty query g:</p><p>This command will query the drive, and more than likely it will tell you that it is dirty.</p><p>Next, type <strong>CHKNTFS /X G</strong>:. The X tells Windows to NOT check that particular drive (G) on the next reboot. At this time, manually reboot your computer, it should not run Chkdsk now, but take you directly to Windows.</p><p>Once Windows has fully loaded, bring up another command prompt and type and <strong>Chkdsk /f /r g</strong>:. This should take you through five stages of the scan and will un-set that dirty bit. Finally, type <strong>fsutil dirty query g:</strong> and hit Enter. Windows will confirm that the dirty bit is not set on that drive.</p><p>You can run the <strong>chkdsk /r</strong> command or the <strong>chkdsk /f</strong> command to check a hard disk for errors. But if The <strong>chkdsk /r</strong> command and the <strong>chkdsk /f</strong>command take a long time to run on a Windows computer see <a href="http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=943974" target="_blank">KB943974</a>.</p><p></p><p>[URL unfurl="true"]https://www.thewindowsclub.com/check-disk-runs-at-every-startup-windows[/URL]</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="shmu26, post: 828344, member: 37647"] It runs at every reboot but finishes after a few seconds, then Windows loads normally. C drive is on SSD. In command prompt I ran C:\WINDOWS\system32>fsutil dirty query c: And I got Volume - c: is Dirty I tried the following, substituting c: where it says g: but the issue was not resolved. If your Check Disk or chkdsk tool in Windows runs on every boot, here are a few things you may want to try. 1. First of all, let it run once completely. 2. Now open the Registry Editor and navigate to the following registry key: In the right pane, you will see BootExecute. Change its value from [I][B]autocheck autochk * /.[/B][/I] to [B]autocheck autochk *[/B] [IMG alt="Check Disk runs at every startup"]https://thewindowsclub-thewindowsclubco.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/bootexecute-value-2.jpg[/IMG] [I]If this works for you great, else try this :[/I] 3. Open a command prompt windows, type the following and hit Enter: fsutil dirty query g: This command will query the drive, and more than likely it will tell you that it is dirty. Next, type [B]CHKNTFS /X G[/B]:. The X tells Windows to NOT check that particular drive (G) on the next reboot. At this time, manually reboot your computer, it should not run Chkdsk now, but take you directly to Windows. Once Windows has fully loaded, bring up another command prompt and type and [B]Chkdsk /f /r g[/B]:. This should take you through five stages of the scan and will un-set that dirty bit. Finally, type [B]fsutil dirty query g:[/B] and hit Enter. Windows will confirm that the dirty bit is not set on that drive. You can run the [B]chkdsk /r[/B] command or the [B]chkdsk /f[/B] command to check a hard disk for errors. But if The [B]chkdsk /r[/B] command and the [B]chkdsk /f[/B]command take a long time to run on a Windows computer see [URL='http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=943974']KB943974[/URL]. [URL unfurl="true"]https://www.thewindowsclub.com/check-disk-runs-at-every-startup-windows[/URL] [/QUOTE]
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