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Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Dig Deeper in Windows Defrag via Command Prompt


Windows users have learned over the years that they need to keep their computers
 defragmented to keep running at top speed.  While Windows Vista and 7 automatically
 defrag your disks, here’s some ways you can dig deeper into Windows Defragmenter.
Windows Disk Defragmenter was turned into a very stripped down utility in Windows 
Vista and 7.  In fact, Vista’s Disk Defragmenter didn’t even let you select the disks 
to defragment until it was updated in Service Pack 1.  The good thing, though, is 
that both Vista and 7 automatically defrag your disks on schedule, so for the most 
part you don’t need to think about it.
Do note, however, that for the most part you’re not going to see massive performance
 jumps by defragmenting a disk.  Actually, upgrading to an SSD would be the best way
 to improve your disk performance, and by the way, Don’t run defrag on an SSD drive!
 SSD drives do not need to be defragmented, and you actually decrease your drive’s
 performance by defragging it.

Using the Disk Defragmenter App

If you do open the defragmenter app, you may be surprised to find how sparce it is. 
 It lets you analyze or defragment individual disks; hold your Ctrl key to select multiple
 disks and defragment your whole system at once.  You can also change the 
defragment schedule.  By default, most computers will be set to defrag at 
1AM Wednesday mornings, but you can change this if you’d rather it defrag at a 
different time or if your computer’s never running then.
But that’s all you can do with the Defragmenter app.  To dig deeper, we need to head over to the command prompt.

Defraging from Command Prompt

The Windows defragment tool actually has tons of features, but you just can’t 
access them from the window interface.  To dig deeper, open command prompt 
in Administrative mode.
To use the defrag tool, just enter defrag followed by the parameters you want to 
use.  As usual, you can view the command’s help file by entering defrag /?.  Then
 to use defrag, just enter the following, like you would with many command apps.
defrag [name of your drive] [parameter] [extra parameters]
So, to simply defrag your drive, just enter defrag [drive name].  If your main drive 
is C:, then just enter defrag C: to defrag your main C drive.  There’s tons more you 
can do with the disk defragmenter, as you can see from the included help info.
So, with that in mind, let’s dive in and look at some of the most common parameters
 you might want to use:

See if you need to defrag

Not sure if your hard drive needs defragmented?  Just analyze your disk by entering
      defrag [drive name] /A
As you can see below, we entered defrag C: /A to analyze our C drive.  After a few
 moments, you can see how large your drive is (Or partition if your hard drive
 is in multiple partitions), how much free space it has, the total fragmented space, and
 largest free space segment.  Underneath, the defrag tool will tell you if it thinks you 
need to defrag now or not.

Defragment all your drives at once

Would you like to just defragment all of your drives without getting extra info or 
doing a more complicated defrag?  If so, just enter defrag /C and let defrag take over.
  Or, hey, you could just do this from the main defrag window since it works the exact
 same.

Other Nice Options

Get more info about the defrag:/V
Consolidate free space on a drive:/X
Defrag at normal process priority:/H
Track a defrag already in progress:/T
Defrag all drives except the one listed:/E
Defrag all drives at the same time:/M – note, this is only advisable if you 
have multiple drives, and will not work 
good on a computer with multiple partitions
You can put the options you need together, too.  Say you want to defrag all of your
 devices in verbose mode to see more info, and you also want the defrag to run at 
top priority.  To do this, we’ll enter:
defrag /C /H /V
Once it’s running, you’ll see the list of the options you’ve selected on the top 
of the command prompt window.  Remember to not close the window before the 
defrag is finished, as this will kill the process.
Now that you’ve got more control over defrag, you can hopefully get your disks 
running at top performance.  Or, even if you don’t want to tweak anything, just 
running defrag /C is much geekier than opening the Disk Defragmenter.  We recently
 asked readers if they use the command prompt; if you’re not in the habit of using it, 
here’s a good chance to get started!

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Prajwol Shrestha
Web Developer
Bhaktapur, Nepal