| source: www.tweak3d.net | September 25, 1999 by Keith "Farrel" McClellan Posted: October 7, 2000 |
|
Introduction |
||
It has been a few months or longer since you last made a clean reinstall of your OS. The overall performance of the computer is beginning to suffer, a product of unused DLL´s cluttering up the system folder, and the overall obesity of the registry files which Windows does a terrible job of managing. A feeling of dread is clouding over the workspace in which the computer resides. It´s time to reinstall the OS. But wait! That painful process of deleting the Windows directory, reinstalling the operating system, and then having to reload all of the applications and games CAN be averted. What follows is nearly a miracle of nature, a renewal of life into a drooping computer. |
||
But, this (cleaning the System & Registry) may seems a bit complicated to some of you guys. If you're in that case, please take a look at another Howto (a very deep one, though without the registry stuff). That's here : Fred Langa Scrub Your Hard Disk : Clean easy ways to recover up to gigabytes of wasted space! |
||
The Miracle : How it worksThis so-called miracle is a combination of several things. |
||
|
||
The first, and most notable of the programs, is the new version of Microsoft´s
very own RegClean
(click & go to 'Downloads'). The next program in the guide is called EasyCleaner . This program is moderately automated; you have to select which keys you wish to delete, but you can use the shift and ctrl keys to select many at once, a feature that the next program doesn´t have. However, there are a few bugs in the EasyCleaner interface, as the user may need to run the program repeatedly before it will clear out all the unused keys. Generally, it should be run consecutively until it no longer detects any unused keys. The last program in the registry cleaning section is called Cleanreg
. The least automated of the three programs, it is
also the most comprehensive : It appears to catch
95% of the unused keys of the other two programs combined, and normally
I would recommend to most users to only use this program; however, it has
no automation at all, so each key has to be deleted separately. This takes
a LONG, LONG time, so running the two other programs is definitely to the
benefit of the user. |
||
|
||
LET'S DO IT STEP BY STEP Before attempting this process, reboot the computer to make
sure there is nothing that will prevent your system from rebooting. If the
computer boots properly, continue on to the first step
|
||
1st stepBegin by starting up the Clean System Directory program from the Start Menu. A box will appear with some checkboxes and three buttons at the bottom. Check the boxes that correspond with your hard drives and disk partitions (for me that was c:, d:, and e:). Then click on the "start scanning" button. After the program has gone through the entire system, a white dialogue box will appear with some buttons at the bottom. Click on the "Select All" button and then click on the "Move Selected Files" button. Then restart your computer before moving on to the next step. However, there's another program that just do the same job: cleaning the unused DLLs that may be wasting the space in your System directory. Here you'll find both the program & its description: Analog DLL Archive |
||
2nd step The root directory (denoted by C:\ under DOS) is the directory that
your computer boots from. It is important for this directory
to be as clean as possible. However, this process is just as dangerous
as screwing around with the registry - so make sure you have a backup of any
files you delete and a convenient boot disk available in case your system
won´t start
Other than that, what you can delete can vary from system to system. But whatever you do, make sure you don´t delete the following files - because EVERYONE (or almost everyone) needs them to boot up. They are: Command.com Ffastun.ffa * Ffastun.ffo * Ffastun.ffl * Ffastun.ffx * Io.sys Msdos.sys Logo.sys Suhdlog.dat Io32.idxReboot the system and make sure it starts up before continuing on to the next step. * - Deleting these files when Find Fast is installed on a system can cause the system to refuse to boot. You can, however, safely delete them if (1) you use the Find Fast applet in the Control Panel to do it, or (2) if you remove or disable the program before deleting them manually, which is something you might do. |
||
3rd stepBegin by opening up the RegClean directory in Windows Explorer and run RegClean. Click on the start button and it will scan the registry files and determine which keys should be removed. After the scanning is complete, click on the Fix Errors button to apply the changes. After this process, you should reboot your system. If the computer has an error during the reboot, just double click on the undo *.reg file that is created to reset the computer to what it was prior. Next, run EasyCleaner from the Start Menu. There are several parts to this program, but for this guide I will focus on the Clean Registry section. Click on the "Clean Registry" button and then click "Find". After the program is done scanning, delete all the entries shown and run the program again. Continue to run the program until no entries come up after a complete scan. And finally, run Cleanreg using Windows Explorer, as this program doesn´t create an icon on the start menu. Uncheck the "Update after Delete" box, select a key from the top window and click on the Delete Key button. Repeat this ten or so times, go up and select the update after delete box, and delete one more key. Then uncheck the update box and continue this process until all of the entries are gone. Reboot the computer and continue onto the next, and final, part. |
||
4th stepNote: If you are using Windows 95 Service Pack 1 or older, you may need to
patch your regedit file. You can download it here.
Windows 95 OSR 2.1 and above are not affected by this bug. C:\ at the command line and then typing (This will speed up the entire operation) :cd\windows regedit /c all.reg This will compress and import the all.reg file, replacing the old registry with a compressed copy of it.Next, type win to start up Windows. Open the FixReg
online program, point it at the all.reg file in the Windows
directory, and open the file. It will automatically make sure that all of the
necessary registry keys were imported. Once this is completed, delete the all.reg
file and reboot the computer.
|
||
Conclusion |
||
Congratulations, you have successfully cleaned out Windows. Soon I will be adding information to this guide about removing unnecessary files that Windows should have already deleted. Remember, if you mess up, I don´t want to hear about it. |
||
| source: www.tweak3d.net | Written By: Keith "Farrel" McClellan Posted: October 7, 2000 |