The Computer Oracle

Windows 7 says a 8.6 GB file won't fit in 14.7 GB space?

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Chapters
00:00 Question
00:42 Accepted answer (Score 110)
01:03 Answer 2 (Score 28)
01:44 Answer 3 (Score 22)
02:18 Answer 4 (Score 3)
03:09 Thank you

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Full question
https://superuser.com/questions/617211/w...

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https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...

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Tags
#windows7

#avk47



ACCEPTED ANSWER

Score 110


It's formatted as FAT32. The largest size file supported on FAT32 is 4GB. You will have to reformat the drive as NTFS or ExFAT.




ANSWER 2

Score 28


The issue is that the target filesystem is FAT32, which only supports files up to 4 GB in size. The error message is not very clear if you've never run into this issue before. You can fill the 14.6 GB space with multiple 4 GB files, but no single file may be larger than 4 GB. You'd need to reformat the disk as NTFS or exFAT to support larger files.




ANSWER 3

Score 22


In addition to David Marshall's answer, there's no need to reformat the drive. You can upgrade from FAT32 to NTFS with the convert command.

>convert /?
Converts a FAT volume to NTFS.

CONVERT volume /FS:NTFS [/V] [/CvtArea:filename] [/NoSecurity] [/X]


  volume      Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon),
              mount point, or volume name.
  /FS:NTFS    Specifies that the volume will be converted to NTFS.
  /V          Specifies that Convert will be run in verbose mode.
  /CvtArea:filename
              Specifies a contiguous file in the root directory
              that will be the place holder for NTFS system files.
  /NoSecurity Specifies that the security settings on the converted
              files and directories allow access by all users.
  /X          Forces the volume to dismount first if necessary.
              All open handles to the volume will not be valid.



ANSWER 4

Score 3


FAT-formatted drives can't see files larger than 4 GB; you'll have to reformat it as NTFS. You may have a directory that is 100 GB in size. However, no single file may be more than 4 GB.

The maximum possible size for a file on a FAT32 volume is 4 GB minus 1 byte (232−1 bytes). Video applications, large databases, and some other software easily exceed this limit. Larger files require another formatting type such as NTFS.

Ref.: Wikipedia article on FAT32.