Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

Tbird says not enough disk space to compact folders, but I have 100GB free.

  • 1 nzaghachinzaghachi
  • 1 nwere nsogbu anwere nsogbu a
  • 1 view
  • Nzaghachi ikpeazụ nke Wayne Mery

more options

I'm accustomed to having T'bird ask if I would like to compact folders, saying it would save 20+ Mbytes to do so. In the past two or three days, however, after I say "Yes", the compacting process slows to a crawl, T'bird becomes unresponsive, and then pops up an error message that "There is not sufficient disk space available to complete the operation" [that's the gist of it as I remember, not copied directly from the screen.] Eventually a different message reports that compaction was unsuccessful owing to insufficient space available.

  My hard disk has more than 100 GB of space free.   What/where is the size-limit set that prevents compaction from finishing?  I have tried clearing the cache, also increased cache size to 1024 Mb.
I'm accustomed to having T'bird ask if I would like to compact folders, saying it would save 20+ Mbytes to do so. In the past two or three days, however, after I say "Yes", the compacting process slows to a crawl, T'bird becomes unresponsive, and then pops up an error message that "There is not sufficient disk space available to complete the operation" [that's the gist of it as I remember, not copied directly from the screen.] Eventually a different message reports that compaction was unsuccessful owing to insufficient space available. My hard disk has more than 100 GB of space free. What/where is the size-limit set that prevents compaction from finishing? I have tried clearing the cache, also increased cache size to 1024 Mb.

All Replies (1)

more options

Do you experience the same problem if you have started Thunderbird in safe mode?

- win7 https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/17419/windows-7-advanced-startup-options-safe-mode#start-computer-safe-mode=windows-7