Article ID: 127852 - Last Review: November 15, 2006 - Revision: 1.1 Total Free Space Reported Incorrectly on Drives Larger Than 2 GBThis article was previously published under Q127852 SYMPTOMS
When you are using Windows 95 to access a mapped network drive that is
larger than 2 gigabytes (GB) in size (for example, an NTFS or FAT volume
shared by a Windows NT server), Windows 95 reports only 2 GB of disk space
for the network drive.
If the network drive is larger than 2 GB and has more than 2 GB of available disk space, Windows 95 reports 2 GB of total disk space, 2 GB of available disk space, and 0 bytes of used disk space. If the network drive has less than 2 GB of available disk space, Windows 95 reports the available disk space correctly. If you use Windows 95 OEM Service Release 2 (OSR2) with a local hard disk that uses the FAT32 file system, Windows reports 0 bytes of used space if the hard disk has more than 2 GB of available disk space. If the local hard disk has less than 2 GB of available disk space, Windows reports the available disk space correctly. RESOLUTION
To work around this behavior for a local hard disk that uses the FAT32
file system, install Microsoft Internet Explorer 4.0 with the Windows
Desktop Update component. Note that this method does not work around this
behavior with network drives.
For information about obtaining Internet Explorer 4.0, visit the following Microsoft Web site: http://www.microsoft.com/ie/
(http://www.microsoft.com/ie/)
STATUS
This behavior is by design for network drives.
MORE INFORMATION
Both Microsoft MS-DOS and Windows 95 use a 16-bit FAT for logical drives
larger than 15 megabytes (MB). The maximum number of clusters for a 16-bit
FAT drive is 64K, or 65,536 bytes (where 1K = 1024 bytes). In addition,
the maximum cluster size in MS-DOS and Windows 95 is 32K, or 32,768 bytes.
Based on this information, the maximum logical drive size in MS-DOS and
Windows 95 is calculated as follows:
32K x 64K = 2048 MB = 2 GB To maintain compatibility with MS-DOS-based and Windows-based programs that assume a 2-GB drive size limit, the Windows 95 network redirector (Vredir.vxd) never reports more than 2 GB of total or available disk space on network drives. | Article Translations
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