Io Error Copying Pst File
for Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Ask a Question Ask for Help Receive Real-Time Help Create a Freelance Project Hire for a Full Time Job Ways to Get Help Expand Search Submit Close Search Login Join Today Products BackProducts Gigs Live Careers Vendor Services Groups Website Testing Store Headlines Experts Exchange > Questions > Can't copy .pst file. Want to Advertise Here? Solved Can't copy .pst file. Posted on 2007-05-05 Outlook 1 Verified Solution 14 Comments 6,394 Views Last Modified: 2008-02-26 System: XP Pro, SP2 Outlook 2003 LARGE .pst file (3.3 GB) Receive the following error when trying to copy it for backup: “Error copying file or folder, Cannot copy outlook: the request could not be performed because of an I/O device error." I don't think it's a file size issue as it has backed up with 3+ GB before. 0 Question by:ycguy1117 Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Google LVL 97 Best Solution bywar1 Greetings ycguy1117 ! You may need to take ownership of the file or folder. Then try to copy. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=308421 If no joy, the PST file could be in use. Boot up to Safe Mode Go to Solution 14 Comments LVL 97 Overall: Level 97 Outlook 63 Message Accepted Solution by:war12007-05-05 Greetings ycguy1117 ! You may need to take ownership of the file or folder. Then try to copy. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=308421 If no joy, the PST file could be in use. Boot up to Safe Mode and then copy the PST file. Best wishes, war1 0 LVL 97 Overall: Level 97 Outlook 63 Message Expert Comment by:war12007-05-05 ycguy1117, Where are you copying the file to? Are you sure the file is 3.3 GB. If it is close to 4 GB, and if the external drive that you are copying to is FAT32 formatted, then the maximum size of a file is 4GB. Make sure you are copying to an NTFS formatted drive. 0 LVL 97 Overall: Level 97 Outlook 63 Message Expert Comment by:war12007-05-05 ycguy1117, If still no joy, use Unlocker to unlock the file http://www.majorgeeks.com/download4660.html Be careful not to delete the file. 0 LVL 4 Overall: Level 4 Outlook 1 Message Expert Comment by:elgrullo4202007-05-05 looks like a hard drive issue, might be some data corruption on your hard drive. go to Start - Run and type chkdsk /r c: (assuming c drive has the pst) this will force a check disk to run and verify for errors it will say that it can not run now if you want it to run on next reboot say yes and reboot once checkdisk has completed, try and copy the pst file again. if this doesn't work you can try this: open MS outlook create a new PSt file - new - outlook data file go to file - Import and export a
Wed Oct 09, 2013 2:46 am Post subject: Error copying large Outlook archive files (.PST) Dear Support team, I'm using ViceVersa Pro (v2.5 Build 2512) and VVEngine Premium (v2.1 Build 2103). I have some Outlook archive files (.pst) which are locating in File Server (Windows 2008 Enterprise SP2), some of them are mounting with user's Outlook client to let them https://www.experts-exchange.com/questions/22554905/Can't-copy-pst-file.html able to read the archived email messages. I would like to replicate these .pst files to the another backup server (also running Windows 2008 Enterprise SP2) by ViceVersa and VVEngine, however there is always occurred error during replication process. Here is my profile: Code: Profile File: c:\program files\viceversa pro\profile\document.fsf http://www.tgrmn.com/web/forum/viewtopict4381.htm Folders - Source: "\\?\UNC\pmls-fs01\Document\" - Target: "\\?\UNC\hcmc-fs01\Document\" - Include Subfolders: Yes - Create sources/targets that do not exist - Exclude files: "*.vxd" - Exclude files: "*.sys" - Exclude files: "*.tmp" - Exclude files: "*.jpg" - Exclude files: "*.gif" - Exclude files: "*.bmp" - Exclude hidden files - Exclude system files - Exclude hidden subfolders - Exclude system subfolders Comparison - Comparison Type: Size and Timestamp - Ignore 2 seconds difference Execution - Method: Synchronization (synchronize conflicts) - No overwrite / read-only / error confirmations - Tracking Database: "C:\Program Files\ViceVersa Pro\Tracking Database\document.tdb" - Log File: "C:\Program Files\ViceVersa Pro\Logs\document.log" (max 10000 KB) - Log only summary and errors - No archive for deleted/replaced source files - No archive for deleted/replaced target files - Process Priority: Realtime - Limit Bandwidth to: 256.00KB/Sec - Skip files that are in use by other applications - Copy file/folder permissions - C
(Русский)ישראל (עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語) HomeLibraryWikiLearnGalleryDownloadsSupportForumsBlogs Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Asked by: The request could not be performed because of https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/8770dd58-83d7-4a6f-8bf0-eb1f77c8d314/the-request-could-not-be-performed-because-of-an-io-device-error-0x8007045d?forum=w7itprogeneral an I/O device error. (0x8007045D) Windows 7 IT Pro > Windows 7 Miscellaneous General discussion 1 Sign in to vote Windows 7 PRO, Lenovo X220, Outlook 2010. Problem with multiple https://askleo.com/how_do_i_fix_a_cyclic_redundancy_check_error_when_i_try_to_copy_a_file/ external Harddrives. Just rolled out a new laptop to one of our users. they had an older lenovo thinkpad. So they try to run a windows backup of specific io error files/folders - we excluded all system file/folders. The backup keeps failing trying to backup the .pst file (1.7GB) - it has not problems backing up the other 58GB's of data including an outlook .OST file (11GB) in the same folder as the .pst. We tried w/ outlook closed (confirmed process was not running) but have the same problem. First io error copying thing I did was update the machine(lenovo drivers) and then installed the driver specific from the EXT HD vendor(s) - but this did not change the results. On the laptop I ran Error checking on the system drive and no errors were found. Backup encountered a problem while backing up file C:\Users\%username%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Outlook\Outlook.pst. Error:(The request could not be performed because of an I/O device error. (0x8007045D)) Any ideas or suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks SJ Changed type Niki HanModerator Friday, August 31, 2012 2:59 AM office related Friday, August 10, 2012 2:42 PM Reply | Quote All replies 0 Sign in to vote If it consistently fails on the same Outlook profile you might want to exclude it from backup just to tesk. If you dont get the I/O obviously its something odd with he profile. Is it only on that one machine?MS-MVP 2010, 2011, 2012 Sysnative.com Team ZigZag Sunday, August 12, 2012 8:25 AM Reply | Quote Moderator 0 Sign in to vote Hi, How about moving the PST file to other location for a t
Date Social Facebook Twitter Google+ Pinterest YouTube About Making Technology Work For Everyone Loading How do I fix a cyclic redundancy check error when I try to copy a file? CRC errors happen when there's a bad spot on the media of your hard disk. Data recovery and disk repair are often possible with the right tools. //
Outlook started acting up, so as part of my attempts to fix it I tried to copy the PST to another location. The copy failed part way through with a cyclic redundancy check error. How can I get past this and backup my data? The cyclic redundancy check, or "CRC" error, indicates a bad spot on your hard drive. The fact that you're seeing it when you try to copy a file indicates that the bad spot may be within the file itself. We need to verify that and then we need to try to recovery your file and repair your hard drive. First, let's make sure that the problem is actually with the file you're copying since it's equally likely that the problem is with the location you're copying too. This is easy. Fire up a Command Prompt window, and then copy the file to NUL: Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:>CD (to wherever the file is located) C:wherever>copy Outlook.pst NUL 1 file(s) copied. This reads the entire file by copying it "nowhere". If this succeeds, the problem is not actually with the file itself, but the location you were trying to copy it to. My recommendation would be to copy it to a different disk entirely, or a different machine on your local network. If this copy fails, then we've confirmed that the bad sector on your hard disk is actually being used by some portion of your file. • Now that we've confirmed that the problem is in fact in the file itself, we need to make as best a copy of it as we can, somewhere else. This sets a position of "it can't get any worse than this". Some data within the file may be lost, but you'll have copied as much as possible before the recovery efforts. Once again, we want to copy the file to some different hard disk, or some other machine on your local network. And once again we need to do this within the command prompt: Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600] (C) Copyright 1985-2001 Microsoft Corp. C:>CD (to wherever the file is located) C: