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| Troubleshooting Floppy Disk Drives | File
System Problems ]
I am experiencing file system corruption problems, such as lost clusters, cross-linked
files or invalid files or directories
Explanation: While performing a routine file system scan on a floppy disk, errors
are being detected. These errors
are usually lost clusters or cross-linked files. The disk itself otherwise works OK,
although one or two files may be corrupted
Diagnosis: File system problems can occur on floppy disks just as they can on hard
disks, although they are less common only because many more files are created and deleted
on an ongoing basis on a hard disk than on a floppy disk. Lost clusters are a common file
system problem and do not usually indicate anything abnormal since they can result simply
from a file not being closed properly on a floppy disk. However, finding large quantities
of lost clusters even when scanning regularly, or repeatedly finding problems like
cross-linked files or invalid files or directories, can be a signal of a more serious
problem.
Note: A lost cluster is
not the same thing at all as a bad sector (which is a physical disk problem, not a file
system problem).
Recommendation: You may want to try all of the following items:
- Make sure you thoroughly scan your disk for
viruses, using an up-to-date virus scanner. Corrupting the file system is a popular
game with viruses.
- Make sure that you are using the correct type of disk utilities. Using a disk utility
not designed for Windows 95 on a floppy disk containing Windows 95 long file names can
cause the program to detect "errors" that don't really exist.
- Make sure the floppy drive
types are properly set up in the system BIOS.
- If the problem recently occurred after installing a particular piece of software, it may
be that program causing the corruption. Some applications can be buggy, and especially if
they crash a lot, they may leave partial files and other file system anomalies lying
around. Try not using the suspect application for a few days if possible, and see if the
problems go away.
- Check for resource conflicts. These can
cause files to be corrupted.
- You may have an instability problem with your operating system installation. Look in this section for more; you may want to try reinstalling the
operating system. A recently-changed driver may be the problem.
- If you have recently installed bus mastering IDE drivers, these could be causing the
problem. See here for more and try uninstalling
them if possible.
- If there is a problem with the disk change sensor or the disk change signal coming from
the drive, then this can cause a disk's file system to be corrupted when you change disks.
The system won't realize the disk has been changed and may write the information from one
disk onto the file system of another. Troubleshoot
this here.
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