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thoste

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Posts posted by thoste

  1. I ticked in "Windows Explorer section of CCleaner v5.92 the checkbox "Taskbar JumpLists" and run it on 64bit Windows 10 v21H2.

    Much to my surprise all the corresponding file entries in the two folders:

    C:\Users\thomas\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Recent\CustomDestinations\

    and

    C:\Users\thomas\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\Recent\AutomaticDestinations\

    are NOT cleaned but be kept after a CCLeaner run.

    Whats wrong?

    How can I get rid of them otherwise?

    Do I really have to add them manually  in the "include folder" section?

     

     

  2. 7 hours ago, nukecad said:

    I think that I see why it's greyed out now - from the look of the drive map I assume that is your 1TB Data drive? (A big clue is that there is no pagefile showing there).

    I think that Boot Time Defrag is only available for the boot drive, which has the system files on it.
    (Select you Acer drive and BTD should be available for that).

    Good idea, but wrong.

    I marked partition C: (with pagefile.sys and swapfile.sys on it) and......menu "Boot Time Defrag" is still disabled.

    Maybe it plays a role that partition C: is on a SSD and partition D: on a hard disk?

    Moreover it should be possible to boot time defrag partitions with NO pagefile.sys on them.

    Think about (at runtime) unmovable MFT tables, or Registry Hive files, or System Volume Information folder (for System Restore Points) or RECYCLE BIN folders or ......

    They need to be defragmented at boot time

    What other reason could it be for greyed out menu?

    Does Defraggler Boot Time Function depend on a (which?) Background Service?

     

    How does Defraggler setup a Boot Time Defrag?

    Maybe it has insufficient access (write) permissions to Task Scheduler or Registry or startup folder?

    In this case Defraggler should show a corresponding warning

     

     

     

     

  3. @nukecad:

    Thank you for your explanation.

    Just one more question:

    You talked about "unmovable" files.

    Yes, I know.

    These are MFT tables and registry files (beside pagefile).

    To defragment these some defragmenters offer "Boot time" defragmentation at next reboot which does the job when there is no file lock on these critical sectors/files.

    Does Defraggler have such an Option?

    I cannot find it.

    Maybe users can easily setup such a job by using Task Scheduler?

    Do you have *.reg Script which injects a corresponding One-Time Task into Registy?

    Thank you

     

  4. In my notebook I have 2 partitions: C: and D:

    C: is located on a SSD

    and

    D: on a hard disk

    Now I mark partition D: on partition pane at the top and click "Analyze".

    Afterwards I click on button right of it and "Defrag" menu.

    Much to my surprise a warning pops up:

    "Volume D: appears to be solid state. Defragmentation may reduce its lifetime. Are you sure to proceed?"

    Why does Defraggler think that D: is on the SSD?

    Or does Defraggler show only D: but mean C: (and want to defrag it)?

    This is clearly a bug.

    Pls fix this.

    Thomas

  5. When I go to

    Tools-->Drive Wiper

    Then I can start to erase free space. Until here everything is clear.

    But when I go to

    Options--->Settings

    then there are some confusing settings:

    1.) At the bottom users can select on which partition to wipe free space.

    Why do I have to select partition here AGAIN? I though I have to select it on Tools-->Drive Wiper?

    2.) Just above there is a check box "Wipe cluster Tips"?

    Cluster Tips are only the remaining unused parts of partially filled clusters. But it does not mean FULL free clusters.

    So are always only clusters tips wiped but not the actual all free space on a partition?

    These options are at least misleading.

  6. I am new to Winapp2 and tried to use it for CCLeaner.

     

    I downloaded newest winapp2ool.exe from github and put it into CCLeaner installation directory (with winapp2.ini).

    Then I started winapp2.ini and selected 2.Trim--->1. Run (default) to trim all unfound applications on my system from winapp2.ini file.

    Afterwards I started CCleaner v5.78 and inspected in Custom Clean--->Applications all remaining entries with stars

    Surprisingly a lot of them still appears:

    E.g. for Opera and Brave browser. I never installed them.

    So why are they NOT trimmed/removed from winapp2.ini (...and CCleaner)?

     

  7. Currently I am running  portable version of CCleaner v5.44 but want to migrate/update to portable Version v5.77.

    Very important is that I can keep all my approx 60-70 specified INLCUDE directories and KEEP cookies settings

    Can I simply copy "ccleaner.ini" from old CCleaner installation folder to new CCleaner installation folder?

    Will new CCleaner v5.77 successfully recognize all these old, previous settings?

     

  8. Ok, you are explaining why CCleaner is CURRENTLY so slow.

    But that doesn't mean that CCleaner will be slow forever.

    Other washer/eraser tools show that the task could perform MUCH faster.

    Maybe CCleaner should implement:

    - direct MFT/Cluster/NTFS access instead of using windows file opening DLLs

    - use concurrent, bundled threads

    - other possible tricks like grouping of  cluster wiping

    So there is much room for CCleaner improvements.

    Could you put this on your feature request/todo list?

    I prefer to use only ONE tool instead of multiple.

    Since CCleaner is good for many other tasks I am willing to elect it as my one-and-only utiltity.

    But erasing performance is really a problem.

    Thank you

    Thomas

     

  9. Due to my observations I  performed the following experiment (on 64bit Win7 with 16GB memory):

    I have a huge dir tree with approx 100000 files between 10kb and 1MB each with a total size of approx 20GB

    I added/included this dir  tree as additional folder to wipe.

    When I perform a CCleaner run it takes around 7 hours (!) to clean all these files (remaining clean stuff is negligible)

    Before cleaning it with CCleaner I made a copy of it.

    As comparison benchmark I performed a wiping of this duplicate dirtree with other tools like WipeFile.

    Surprisingly the WipeFIle requires only ~30 minutes for the same task.

    That means CCleaner is significantly slower than other tools.

    - CCLeaner uses "Secure file deletion Simple Overwrite (1 pass)

    - WipeFile uses Random overwrite (1 time)

    This  is disappointing

    I suggest urgently to improve wipe speed in the next CCleaner release.

    Thank you

    Thomas

     

     

  10. On my Win7 system I have two independent Firefox installations:

    - The first "normal" installation of v58.0.2

    - The second, portable Firefox v52.60 Firefox ESR version

    In CCleaner I defined a couple of Cookies which should be kept.

    When I run now CCleaner it detects and cleans successfully the cookies of the first Firefox installation since it knows the profile path from registry.

    Unfortunately CCleaner does NOT recognize and clean the second Firefox installation.

    Is there a way to let CCleaner clean the second Firefox installation (especially the cookies which are not in the "keep"list) as well?

    Thomas

  11. As far as I can see CCLeaner looks into Registry to find browser installations on the current system and apply afterwards e.g. cookie washer.

    It works.

    BUT what if I setup PORTABLE browser installation (like Firefox ESR or Portable Chrome)?

    Since these browser installations do not use Registry CCleaner cannot find them.

    How can I tell CCleaner to apply Cookie washing rules onto these portable browser installations as well?

    I can imagine that there is an option to enter base pathes of those portable browser installation but cannot find them.

    Thomas

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