evolucion8
Platinum Member
http://www.dailytech.com/Catas...layed/article15901.htm
"The RTM build -- 7600.16385 -- thus far only received by a handful, features a reportedly massive memory leak in the unassuming, but frequently used program chkdsk.exe.
When scanning a second hard disk (a non-boot partition or second physical drive) using the "/r" (read and verify all file data) parameter the utility starts to leak memory like its a monsoon and quickly runs up a high enough memory debt that it blue screens and crashes the system, according to some (others merely report a memory usage of around 98 percent within seconds, but without the legendary "blue screen of death").
The bug has been confirmed on many different hardware setups --it's been verified to occur on everything from a Intel Atom-based netbook running the 32-bit version, to a Intel Core 2 Duo notebook running the 64-bit version, and a VMware Workstation 6.5.2 virtual machine running the 32-bit version.
Explorer.exe, which runs the utility does not release the excessively large amounts of memory it gobbles up, compounding the problem.
Microsoft is reportedly trying to avoid claiming responsibility, blaming the problem on chipset driver issues and telling users to upgrade their firmware. Yes, that makes absolutely no sense, considering the bug has been verified to exist in VMware. However, that's the current stance Microsoft is reportedly taking."
Interesting...
I experimented the bug myself to see if the issue was true; I plugged a USB Hard Drive in one of my PCs, which has a Via P4M800 chipset, Pentium 4 2.80C, 1GB DDR 400 and 40GB hard drive, and when I used chkdsk /F /R on my USB drive, the chkdsk utility started to eat RAM gradually reaching 640MB of RAM usage and 720MB of page file usage, but strangely enough the PC never crashed. The funny thing is that the issue also happens when you use the Check Disk Utility with the two checkmarks On (Fix File System and Bad Sectors)in Tools option in the Hard Disk properties.
When CHKDSK /F /R is used and then you close the Command Window, CHKDSK will close and the RAM will be released, but when you use the Hard Drive Tools option to access CHKDSK, Explorer won't release the RAM. The only way to release it is killing the Explorer process and turn it back on, that fixed the issue.
There's any other person who can replicate this? Use Non primary hard drives preferably, (secondary, backups, USB etc )
"The RTM build -- 7600.16385 -- thus far only received by a handful, features a reportedly massive memory leak in the unassuming, but frequently used program chkdsk.exe.
When scanning a second hard disk (a non-boot partition or second physical drive) using the "/r" (read and verify all file data) parameter the utility starts to leak memory like its a monsoon and quickly runs up a high enough memory debt that it blue screens and crashes the system, according to some (others merely report a memory usage of around 98 percent within seconds, but without the legendary "blue screen of death").
The bug has been confirmed on many different hardware setups --it's been verified to occur on everything from a Intel Atom-based netbook running the 32-bit version, to a Intel Core 2 Duo notebook running the 64-bit version, and a VMware Workstation 6.5.2 virtual machine running the 32-bit version.
Explorer.exe, which runs the utility does not release the excessively large amounts of memory it gobbles up, compounding the problem.
Microsoft is reportedly trying to avoid claiming responsibility, blaming the problem on chipset driver issues and telling users to upgrade their firmware. Yes, that makes absolutely no sense, considering the bug has been verified to exist in VMware. However, that's the current stance Microsoft is reportedly taking."
Interesting...
I experimented the bug myself to see if the issue was true; I plugged a USB Hard Drive in one of my PCs, which has a Via P4M800 chipset, Pentium 4 2.80C, 1GB DDR 400 and 40GB hard drive, and when I used chkdsk /F /R on my USB drive, the chkdsk utility started to eat RAM gradually reaching 640MB of RAM usage and 720MB of page file usage, but strangely enough the PC never crashed. The funny thing is that the issue also happens when you use the Check Disk Utility with the two checkmarks On (Fix File System and Bad Sectors)in Tools option in the Hard Disk properties.
When CHKDSK /F /R is used and then you close the Command Window, CHKDSK will close and the RAM will be released, but when you use the Hard Drive Tools option to access CHKDSK, Explorer won't release the RAM. The only way to release it is killing the Explorer process and turn it back on, that fixed the issue.
There's any other person who can replicate this? Use Non primary hard drives preferably, (secondary, backups, USB etc )