hermit Posted November 27, 2001 Share Posted November 27, 2001 when one delete registry entries in the registry, the registry file size does not reducein windows me, there is a function called something like regsvr32/fix where windows rebuilds the registry for you and dramatically reduce the registry file sizein windows xp..where is this function?...my registry is keep on growing bigger and bigger in size! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hermit Posted November 28, 2001 Author Share Posted November 28, 2001 man..no one knows the answer to this "big question"?!!??!?! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
FthrJACK Posted November 29, 2001 Share Posted November 29, 2001 ive no idea.. got me there, but i bet loucypher knows... Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest LouCypher Posted November 29, 2001 Share Posted November 29, 2001 HKLMSYSTEMControlSet001Controlhivelisthas all the locations of the files used to build your registry as it appears to you in REGEDIT. Most of the main files are in C:WINDOWSSYSTEM32CONFIG. The user portions are in the profile directory for each user.The "REGSVR32 /FIX" doesn't work anymore, so forget about it. It used to be you could export the registry to a text file, delete it, and then recreate the registry from the text file, resulting in a smaller registry. You can't do that anymore because of Windows File Protection.There USED to be a registry key to set the RSL (Registry Size Limit), but that functionality has also been disabled. See here:http://support.microsoft.com/support/kb/ar...s/Q292/7/26.ASPSo basically, Microsoft has taken out all previous ways of reducing the size of your registry, or limiting the amount of diskspace your registry takes up. I guess they assume EVERYONE is going to be running XP on a 100GB ATA 100 drive or something. From the summary on their webpage:In Windows XP, the Registry Size Limit (RSL) functionality has been removed. Therefore, [b:468fc63a59]there are no longer any limits on the total amount of space that may be consumed by registry data (hives) in paged pool memory, and in disk space[/b:468fc63a59]. [/quote:468fc63a59]Certainly not the answer you wanted, but it's the best I can come up with. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Micropocalypse Posted November 30, 2001 Share Posted November 30, 2001 someone ap[b:2a34743d43]p[/b:2a34743d43]oint lou to regitry wiz guy:D Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
hermit Posted December 3, 2001 Author Share Posted December 3, 2001 yup!so just let the registry file size grow bigger and bigger??!?!?!any solution?so that means no use running all those registry cleaner..?!?!?ex. regclean by MS, regcleaner by forgot who, norton utilities , etc...etc...!!!?!?!?!?!WHAT THE?!?!??!?!:behead :blueteam :WTF?: :nerves :yeahyeah :mad: :blueteam :wail: Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gruffpuppy Posted December 3, 2001 Share Posted December 3, 2001 In a world full of inexpensive large drives does the size of the registry matter? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest LouCypher Posted December 4, 2001 Share Posted December 4, 2001 yup!so just let the registry file size grow bigger and bigger??!?!?!any solution?so that means no use running all those registry cleaner..?!?!?ex. regclean by MS, regcleaner by forgot who, norton utilities , etc...etc...!!!?!?!?!?!WHAT THE?!?!??!?!:behead :blueteam :WTF?: :nerves :yeahyeah :mad: :blueteam :wail: [/quote:d3dc440ac8]I think you'll still see some benefit running RegClean to remove unused entries. There's a large amount of garbage left over by most programs when you uninstall, in the hopes you might reinstall or upgrade in the future. Something like regclean would remove those entries. I personally had a problem with REGCLEAN from Microsoft becase it detected some keys as not being in use when they were, and as a result there was a program I had that didn't work right after that. I can exactly remeber which one as it's been so long (I was still running Win95 I think, before 98 came out).The registry is still mostly made up by files which can be compressed and defragmented. Running regclean might make the registry files smaller by removing some of the garbage left in there. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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