anathematized1 Posted December 26, 2010 Share Posted December 26, 2010 I can't seem to find any relevant information in a Google search, so I figured I'd ask here.Here's the deal, I have a 1 TB HDD in my computer. One day I was trying to download something that was 35 GB in size. I know I've not come close to filling up my 1TB HDD, but I get an "out of disk space error." So I pull up My Computer and I look at the C drive and it says something like 15 GB free out of 931 GB. I was like, "the f***!?" So I downloaded TreeSize Professional when I couldn't find where in the hell all of this memory usage was. I pull it up, let it scan and there's a folder, C:\AV_LOGS that is something like 600-800 GB in size. I open it up and there are all of these sub-folders, Vcs5StrMgr, VCS7SplitterLogs, Vcs7VADPlayer, VCS4SplitterLogs, VCS4ProvManager, VCS4Recorder. They all contain .log files for various programs that use audio and/or video (Oblivion, WMP, etc). One of the log files was like 500 GB and another was like 200, and they were both for a program I have on my computer, Screaming Bee MorphVox Pro. I deleted the two files but any time I open MorphVox, a new .log file is created and it's just as massive as before.Basically what I want to know is, what is creating all of these .log files and how I can turn it off.To save time in typing out everything about my system, I'm just going to include a system information file (size, 1.82 Mb, hosted on Mediafire.com). Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cannie Posted December 27, 2010 Share Posted December 27, 2010 (edited) Basically what I want to know is, what is creating all of these .log files and how I can turn it off.No logical reason at all. Maybe the program has been modified by a virus. HTH Edited December 27, 2010 by cannie Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cluberti Posted December 27, 2010 Share Posted December 27, 2010 A Process Monitor running with a filter on that file path is probably the best way to find it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
anathematized1 Posted December 28, 2010 Author Share Posted December 28, 2010 A Process Monitor running with a filter on that file path is probably the best way to find it.Well I have Processmon and I created a filter for that folder, but it's not picking up anything. It tells me that all ____ events are excluded by the filter... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cluberti Posted December 28, 2010 Share Posted December 28, 2010 Assuming data is still being written into it, save all events to a native pml file, zip or rar it up, and upload it somewhere if possible. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
anathematized1 Posted December 31, 2010 Author Share Posted December 31, 2010 Assuming data is still being written into it, save all events to a native pml file, zip or rar it up, and upload it somewhere if possible.And that would be one thing I don't know how to do...I can force it to write to that folder by deleting the log files that are there and then opening and running the programs that whatever it is creates log files for and they will show up. That part is no problem, I'm lost on the rest of it though... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Posted December 31, 2010 Share Posted December 31, 2010 Process Monitor > File > Save = .pml file Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
cluberti Posted December 31, 2010 Share Posted December 31, 2010 Assuming data is still being written into it, save all events to a native pml file, zip or rar it up, and upload it somewhere if possible.And that would be one thing I don't know how to do...I can force it to write to that folder by deleting the log files that are there and then opening and running the programs that whatever it is creates log files for and they will show up. That part is no problem, I'm lost on the rest of it though...That is exactly what you should do then, all while running procmon. Then save, compress, and upload the .pml file (don't even bother to filter this time) and we'll have a look. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
anonmasu Posted March 23, 2011 Share Posted March 23, 2011 (edited) how to stop it Edited July 19, 2011 by anonmasu Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
BpArCuCTeMbI Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 I can't seem to find any relevant information in a Google search, so I figured I'd ask here.Here's the deal, I have a 1 TB HDD in my computer. One day I was trying to download something that was 35 GB in size. I know I've not come close to filling up my 1TB HDD, but I get an "out of disk space error." So I pull up My Computer and I look at the C drive and it says something like 15 GB free out of 931 GB. I was like, "the f***!?" So I downloaded TreeSize Professional when I couldn't find where in the hell all of this memory usage was. I pull it up, let it scan and there's a folder, C:\AV_LOGS that is something like 600-800 GB in size. I open it up and there are all of these sub-folders, Vcs5StrMgr, VCS7SplitterLogs, Vcs7VADPlayer, VCS4SplitterLogs, VCS4ProvManager, VCS4Recorder. They all contain .log files for various programs that use audio and/or video (Oblivion, WMP, etc). One of the log files was like 500 GB and another was like 200, and they were both for a program I have on my computer, Screaming Bee MorphVox Pro. I deleted the two files but any time I open MorphVox, a new .log file is created and it's just as massive as before.Basically what I want to know is, what is creating all of these .log files and how I can turn it off.To save time in typing out everything about my system, I'm just going to include a system information file (size, 1.82 Mb, hosted on Mediafire.com).Hello, AV Voice Changer creates this log files. P.S. I'm late for 2 years but I hope that it will help you.P.P.S. Sorry for my bad English Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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