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File copy problem



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 16th 09, 09:06 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.
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  #2  
Old October 17th 09, 11:25 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
DL[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 929
Default File copy problem

Are you copying data files only?
Is this a simple Explorer copy or?

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying has
stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is there
a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.



  #3  
Old October 17th 09, 11:25 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
DL[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 929
Default File copy problem


Are you copying data files only?
Is this a simple Explorer copy or?

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying has
stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is there
a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.



  #4  
Old October 17th 09, 01:36 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Malke[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,341
Default File copy problem

Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook as
opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it fails
any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does, fail right
out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually do so
immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ

  #5  
Old October 17th 09, 01:36 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Malke[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,341
Default File copy problem

Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook as
opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it fails
any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does, fail right
out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually do so
immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ

  #6  
Old October 17th 09, 02:52 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

DL wrote:
Are you copying data files only?
Is this a simple Explorer copy or?

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying has
stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is there
a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.



Yes, I'm only copying data files using Explorer
  #7  
Old October 17th 09, 02:52 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem


DL wrote:
Are you copying data files only?
Is this a simple Explorer copy or?

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying has
stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is there
a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.



Yes, I'm only copying data files using Explorer
  #8  
Old October 17th 09, 03:06 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook as
opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it fails
any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does, fail right
out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually do so
immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside on
a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive is
compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't fail
any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the drive
which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message
  #9  
Old October 17th 09, 03:06 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook as
opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it fails
any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does, fail right
out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually do so
immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside on
a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive is
compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't fail
any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the drive
which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message
  #10  
Old October 17th 09, 03:21 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Richard Urban
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 728
Default File copy problem

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook
as opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does,
fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually
do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the external
drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside on a
PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive is
compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't fail
any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the drive which
copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is within a
compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files are likely gone
forever. Some backup programs will compress countless thousands of files
into 1 compressed file which you then need the original backup program to
access. If this type of backup becomes corrupted you may lose 1, or all, of
the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option "may"
correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when backing
up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for your data.

--

Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP
Windows Desktop Experience & Security

  #11  
Old October 17th 09, 03:21 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Richard Urban
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 728
Default File copy problem

"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.


Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on *both*
drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new. If the
external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western Digital MyBook
as opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and put in a drive
enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their diagnostic method.
For the source drive (and the external drive if it isn't a branded
appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the drive
mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will create a
bootable CD with the file you download. You will need third-party burning
software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the free ImgBurn. Burn as an
image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often does,
fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will usually
do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the external
drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside on a
PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive is
compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't fail
any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the drive which
copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is within a
compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files are likely gone
forever. Some backup programs will compress countless thousands of files
into 1 compressed file which you then need the original backup program to
access. If this type of backup becomes corrupted you may lose 1, or all, of
the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option "may"
correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when backing
up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for your data.

--

Richard Urban
Microsoft MVP
Windows Desktop Experience & Security

  #12  
Old October 17th 09, 04:09 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Richard Urban wrote:
"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.

Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on
*both* drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new.
If the external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western
Digital MyBook as opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and
put in a drive enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their
diagnostic method. For the source drive (and the external drive if it
isn't a branded appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the
drive mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will
create a bootable CD with the file you download. You will need
third-party burning software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the
free ImgBurn. Burn as an image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often
does, fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will
usually do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for
years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside
on a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive
is compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't
fail any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the
drive which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is within
a compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files are likely
gone forever. Some backup programs will compress countless thousands of
files into 1 compressed file which you then need the original backup
program to access. If this type of backup becomes corrupted you may lose
1, or all, of the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option "may"
correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when
backing up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for
your data.

OK, here's more "specific" detail. The source files are contained in a
compressed folder in a partitioned drive which is not compressed. I'm
trying to copy to an external drive which is not compressed (WD
Passport). chkdsk /f says no errors in the drive partition.
  #13  
Old October 17th 09, 04:09 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Richard Urban wrote:
"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.

Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on
*both* drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is new.
If the external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a Western
Digital MyBook as opposed to just an extra hard drive you bought and
put in a drive enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech support for their
diagnostic method. For the source drive (and the external drive if it
isn't a branded appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the
drive mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will
create a bootable CD with the file you download. You will need
third-party burning software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the
free ImgBurn. Burn as an image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often
does, fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it will
usually do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable for
years.

Malke

I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside
on a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive
is compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't
fail any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the
drive which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is within
a compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files are likely
gone forever. Some backup programs will compress countless thousands of
files into 1 compressed file which you then need the original backup
program to access. If this type of backup becomes corrupted you may lose
1, or all, of the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option "may"
correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when
backing up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for
your data.

OK, here's more "specific" detail. The source files are contained in a
compressed folder in a partitioned drive which is not compressed. I'm
trying to copy to an external drive which is not compressed (WD
Passport). chkdsk /f says no errors in the drive partition.
  #14  
Old October 19th 09, 10:12 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Mr. Cheese wrote:
Richard Urban wrote:
"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.

Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on
*both* drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is
new. If the external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a
Western Digital MyBook as opposed to just an extra hard drive you
bought and put in a drive enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech
support for their diagnostic method. For the source drive (and the
external drive if it isn't a branded appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the
drive mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will
create a bootable CD with the file you download. You will need
third-party burning software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the
free ImgBurn. Burn as an image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often
does, fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it
will usually do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable
for years.

Malke
I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside
on a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive
is compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't
fail any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the
drive which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is
within a compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files
are likely gone forever. Some backup programs will compress countless
thousands of files into 1 compressed file which you then need the
original backup program to access. If this type of backup becomes
corrupted you may lose 1, or all, of the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option
"may" correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when
backing up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for
your data.

OK, here's more "specific" detail. The source files are contained in a
compressed folder in a partitioned drive which is not compressed. I'm
trying to copy to an external drive which is not compressed (WD
Passport). chkdsk /f says no errors in the drive partition.

OK, I've "moved" all my files except those which are corrupted. ("moved"
because these are music files that are managed by the Win Media Player)
I'm left with an empty partition except for those corrupted files/folders.
Can I format this partioned drive to get rid of the corrupted stuff?

Thx to all for your help...
  #15  
Old October 19th 09, 10:12 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics
Mr. Cheese
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Posts: 24
Default File copy problem

Mr. Cheese wrote:
Richard Urban wrote:
"Mr. Cheese" wrote in message
...
Malke wrote:
Mr. Cheese wrote:

I recently bought an external HD for use as an archive device. Copying
has stopped in a couple of places with the message:

"Cannot create or replace (filename): Cannot find the specified file.
Make sure you specifiy the correct path and filename."

The properties of these files show zero bytes. Is the data lost? Is
there a way to "erase" the file so copying can continue?

I've run chkdsk on the source drive and no errors are found.

Usually when this happens it indicates a bad hard drive and/or file
corruption. I would run a hard drive diagnostic - not Chkdsk - on
*both* drives, ignoring the fact that the external hard drive is
new. If the external hard drive is a branded appliance (like a
Western Digital MyBook as opposed to just an extra hard drive you
bought and put in a drive enclosure), contact the mftr.'s tech
support for their diagnostic method. For the source drive (and the
external drive if it isn't a branded appliance):

Test the hard drive with a diagnostic utility downloaded from the
drive mftr.'s website or use Seagate's SeaTools For DOS. You will
create a bootable CD with the file you download. You will need
third-party burning software to do this such as Roxio, Nero, or the
free ImgBurn. Burn as an image, not as data.

http://www.imgburn.com

http://www.seagate.com/www/en-us/sup...ls/seatooldreg
http://seagate.custkb.com/seagate/cr...p?DocId=201271
(how-to)

Boot with the CD you made and do a thorough test of the drive. If it
fails any physical tests, replace it. New hardware can, and often
does, fail right out of the box. If hardware is going to fail it
will usually do so immediately or quite soon, otherwise being viable
for years.

Malke
I have had this error messsage on a few files before I bought the
external drive. It occured when I was trying to rename a few file(s).
Other info I failed to include in my original msg... the files reside
on a PartitionMagic partition which I created 5 years ago. the drive
is compressed.
Thx for your detailed response. I'm curious, if the "drive" doesn't
fail any physical tests, what then? I have hundreds of files on the
drive which copied without incident. Only a few give me this message




It sounds like you have "data" corruption. If this corruption is
within a compressed file, containing many files, the corrupted files
are likely gone forever. Some backup programs will compress countless
thousands of files into 1 compressed file which you then need the
original backup program to access. If this type of backup becomes
corrupted you may lose 1, or all, of the backed up files.

If the files are not compressed running chkdsk with the /f option
"may" correct the problem.

This is one of the reasons that one should never compress files when
backing up important data. A straight copy process is most secure for
your data.

OK, here's more "specific" detail. The source files are contained in a
compressed folder in a partitioned drive which is not compressed. I'm
trying to copy to an external drive which is not compressed (WD
Passport). chkdsk /f says no errors in the drive partition.

OK, I've "moved" all my files except those which are corrupted. ("moved"
because these are music files that are managed by the Win Media Player)
I'm left with an empty partition except for those corrupted files/folders.
Can I format this partioned drive to get rid of the corrupted stuff?

Thx to all for your help...
 




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