Chkdsk May Report Extended Attribute Set Corruption on Restart After Abnormal Shutdown (228369)



The information in this article applies to:

  • Microsoft Windows 2000 Server SP1
  • Microsoft Windows 2000 Advanced Server SP1
  • Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional SP1

This article was previously published under Q228369

SYMPTOMS

After you perform a "dirty" restart on an NTFS-formatted computer running Windows 2000, Chkdsk scans the drive and may find some extended file attributes that are corrupt, which it then displays.

CAUSE

This behavior can occur because extended attributes are not protected by NTFS file system transaction logging. Extended file attributes are the data displayed under the summary tab of a file properties dialog box, such items such as Author, Subject, Source, and so on. These attributes can become corrupted by a "dirty" system shutdown.

STATUS

Microsoft has confirmed that this is a problem in the Microsoft products that are listed at the beginning of this article.

MORE INFORMATION

Chkdsk may display a screen that looks something like this:


The type of the file system is NTFS.
Volume label is test1.

CHKDSK is verifying files (stage 1 of 3)...
File verification completed.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 2566.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 4358.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 4461.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 5317.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 5320.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 5321.
Deleting corrupt extended attribute set in file 5322.


NOTE: A "dirty" restart refers to shutting down and restarting Windows 2000 by cutting off and then resuming power. A "clean" restart uses the Shutdown command on the Start menu.

Modification Type:MajorLast Reviewed:11/19/2003
Keywords:kbprb KB228369