Microsoft KB Archive/101267

= Files Are Larger on FAT Partitions =

Article ID: 101267

Article Last Modified on 11/1/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server 3.1
 * Microsoft Windows NT Workstation 3.1
 * Microsoft Windows NT Advanced Server 3.1

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This article was previously published under Q101267



SUMMARY
This article provides information on files stored on a FAT partition under Windows NT 3.1. It is divided into two sections:


 * FAT Files are Larger than NTFS or HPFS Files
 * 32-bit Commands Result in Large Initial File Sizes

FAT Files are Larger than NTFS or HPFS Files
Files stored on a FAT file system take more disk space than on HPFS or NTFS file systems. This is because the FAT file system uses clusters to allocate disk space for files. Clusters represent the minimum amount of disk space any file can use. For example: If your cluster size is 4K and you create a 1 byte file, you will waste almost 4095 bytes.

If you are storing many large files on a FAT file system, the wasted space is minimal. But, if you have many small files, the wasted space can be equal to or greater than the amount of data you are storing.

FAT cluster size is dependent on the size of the logical drive. Because the FAT file system can only track a maximum of 64K clusters, the larger the logical drive or partition, the larger the cluster size. Also, there is a maximum cluster size of 64K, making the largest logical drive size 4 gigabytes.

NOTE: The maximum cluser size under MS-DOS is 32K, making the largest logical drive size 2 gigabytes.

HPFS and FAT both have a fixed sector size of 512 bytes. HPFS uses a cluster size of two sectors (1K). NTFS supports cluster sizes of 512, 1024, 2048, and 4096 bytes.

NOTE: In some cases, files stored on an NTFS partition may be bigger than the same files stored on a FAT partition. This is because NTFS stores all files in the master file table in 2048 byte blocks. If a FAT partition is using 512 byte clusters, it will store a small file more efficiently than NTFS.

32-bit Commands Result in Large Initial File Sizes
Using 32-bit commands from Microsoft Visual C/C++ to create a file on a FAT partition under Windows NT will cause the file to take more space on the hard drive than is expected. This behavior is designed to optimize write operations to the file. 64K blocks are allocated so that later write operations to the file can be made to a contiguous area of disk space. Once the file is closed, the file size is reduced to the amount of space actually used by the file. And, the amount of disk space allocated when the files are opened is lowered as the total amount of disk space on the drive decreases.

Additional query words: prodnt 32 64

Keywords: kbother KB101267

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