You can let the Disk defragmenter tool at C:\Windows\System32\dfrgui.exe handle the job.
- Once you've set it up you can forget everything you have already forgotten about defragging.
- That tool existed in Windows 7 as well. Perhaps you used it without realising [it runs defrag automatically and only when the computer is idle].
- It knows how to treat different types of disk [such as SSD] correctly.
- To do so yourself using the command line switches of defrag.exe takes some study. It is not difficult; it's just more effort than doing nothing takes i.e. more work than letting the tool do the job it was designed for.
There was a big change to defragging during the development of Windows 7 and it has been kept in later versions.
Since Windows 7, defragging in Windows only affects fragments of less than 64MB. Larger fragments are left untouched because there was no overall benefit.
You might also want to consider
Disk cleanup - TenForumsTutorials
And you can check for errors in Windows system files using
SFC-DISM - TenForumsTutorials
- Use Option 3
- If any files are reported as irreparable, see the note on the coloured background at the end of Option 3 and make sure you are connected to the internet whilst you do it.
- If you want to record or report your results [such as irreparable errors] then use the procedure given in Option 5. This will produce a very small text file that can reasonably be posted for others to review.
And, speaking about breaking things, surely you are not worried about that because you have a good backup routine.
my ditty -
File backup vs imaging, imaging utilities, backing up drivers [post #3] - TenForums
All the best,
Denis
It's really worth making time to browse through the
Tutorial index - there's a shortcut to it at the top of every page.
- At the foot of the Tutorial index is a shortcut to download it as a spreadsheet.
- I download a new copy each month.
- By downloading it as a spreadsheet I can benefit from Excel's excellent filtering capabilities when I search for topics of interest.
- Tutorials are also listed by category at
Tutorials - there's also a shortcut to that at the top of every page.
- Both tutorial lists are searchable.
- You can also search for TenForumsTutorials in many general search engines, such as Google, by adding
site:tenforums.com/tutorials after your search term. For example,
taskbar toolbars site:tenforums.com/tutorials
You can search TenForums using the search box in the top-right corner of all TenForums webpages or using
Advanced Search - TenForums
- You can also search TenForums threads in many general search engines, such as Google, by adding
site:tenforums.com after your search term. For example,
Search for drivers by HardwareID site:tenforums.com
- [This is what the search box in the top-right corner of TenForums webpages does automatically]