The main question is: did the Windows devs actually implement a graceful cancellation procedure, and if so how do I trigger it? Some implementations of fsck (linux equivalent) can be stopped gracefully - even in repair mode - so theoretically it should definitely be possible to safely stop a chkdsk procedure. The /r /f flags causes chkdsk to run in read-write mode, so then it's not generally safe to just kill the process. That question is about running chkdsk without parameters, and that is safe because it runs in read-only mode. Note: the linked duplicate question is NOT the same. This cannot be done while Windows is running, but only during startup (outside of CMD). Just powering down the computer risks corruption, so how can I safely abort it?Ĭtrl+C isn't an option: I'm running chkdsk /r /f on the drive that has Windows installed. I started a chkdsk /r /f C: on Windows 10, but now that it's running I want to cancel it.
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