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Page file error.......

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Scotsdude

Technical User
Jan 17, 2002
697
GB
Hey everybody -

Got a Win2K Sp2 machine, with 128Mb RAM and a 60Gb hard drive. The hard drive is about half full, so there is plenty of space left. The machine acts primarily as a sort of hidden network storage: ie, only certain people know of its existence and can connect to it.

The problem is that it keeps saying that no paging file has been set or it is too small, although we've set it to range from 200Mb up to 1Gb, and then promptly creates a 20Mb temp page file. We've virus-scanned the damn thing, and we have full admin access on the machine....

any ideas?
Scotsdude[bravo]
Life is nothing without beer
Help us help you - let us know when our insane scribblings help!!
 
Had the same problem. If I recall correctly I changed the place of the pagefile, putted the value of the pagefile to 0. Restarted the machine.
I then had 2 pagefiles. A new one and the one I changed place. Deleted the "old" one. And then I could change the new one without a problem. The "old" pagefile should be on a partition that doesn't have already a pagefile on it.

Let me know if it helps!

Regards,

[morning]
 
LG,

cheers for the help dude. Unfortunately, didn't work this time.

Any other ideas? Scotsdude[bravo]
Life is nothing without beer
Help us help you - let us know when our insane scribblings help!!
 
Hi,

Found this on TechNet:


SYMPTOMS
Your computer may seem to stop responding (hang) while Windows is loading your personal settings, or you may receive the following error message after you log on to Windows:

Limited Virtual Memory
Your system has no paging file, or the paging file is too small.

To fix this problem, go to System in Control Panel, click the Advanced tab, and under Performance, click Settings. On the Advanced tab, click Change. Click 'Custom size,' and then type an initial or maximum paging file size.
If you view the configuration settings for the paging file by following the instructions in the error message, you may receive the following message:
Windows created a temporary paging file on your computer because of a problem that occurred with your paging file configuration when you started your computer. The total paging file size for all disk drives may be somewhat larger than the size you specified.
After you click OK, the settings for your paging file may seem to be correct.
CAUSE
This error message may occur if Windows tries to create a paging file on an NTFS volume, but the System and Administrators accounts do not have the correct NTFS permissions on the volume.
RESOLUTION
To resolve this issue, give the System and Administrators accounts full control of the NTFS volume on which the paging file is configured. To do this:
If you are running Windows XP Home Edition, or you are running Windows XP Professional but you do not log on to a domain, start your computer in Safe mode.For additional information about starting your computer in Safe mode, click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q315222 A Description of the Safe Boot Mode Options in Windows XP
NOTE: If your computer seems to stop responding while Windows is loading your personal settings, press ALT+TAB to switch to the Limited Virtual Memory dialog box, and then click OK.


Click Start, point to Programs (or All Programs), point to Accessories, and then click Windows Explorer.
In the left pane, expand My Computer, and then click a drive that is configured to use a paging file.

To determine if a drive is configured to use a paging file:
Click Start, click Run, type control sysdm.cpl, and then click OK.
On the Advanced tab, click Settings under Performance.
On the Advanced tab, click Change under Virtual Memory.
Click a drive in the list, and then note the options that are selected under Paging file size for selected drive. A drive is configured to use a paging file unless No paging file is selected for that drive. If more than one drive is configured to use a paging file, click the first drive in the list the first time that you follow these steps. Click the second drive in the list the second time that you follow these steps, and so on.
Click Cancel, and then click Cancel to return to the System Properties dialog box.
On the Computer Name tab, note the name before the first period in the Full computer name box. This is your computer name. You will need this information in steps 5 and 6.
On the File menu, click Properties. Click the Security tab to view the current permissions.
Click Add, type computer name\system, and then click OK.
Click Add, type computer name\Administrators, click OK, and then click OK. Note that you must type Administrators, not Administrator.
Click System, and then click to select the Full Control check box. This automatically selects the other check boxes.
Click Administrators, and then click to select the Full Control check box. This automatically selects the other check boxes.
Click OK.
If you want to make changes to your paging file options, click Start, click Run, type control sysdm.cpl, and then click OK.
On the Advanced tab, click Settings under Performance.
On the Advanced tab, click Change under Virtual Memory, and then set the paging file options that you want.For additional information about configuring paging file options, click the article number below to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
Q308417 HOW TO: Set Performance Options in Windows XP
Close the System Properties dialog box, quit any running programs, and then restart the computer.

Hope this helps!

Regards,
LG
 
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