Check Disk (or chkdsk) performs a scan of the file system to find and fix problems chkdsk resides in the command line interface and the actual app is not, so you may not know how to run it, but as you can guess, it is quite important as a utility especially if things are going wrong
In the latest version of Windows, the December Windows 10 20H2 update brought back a bug that causes the system to crash when performing a disk check (showing a green screen of death), suggests a German posted by an education system administrator language forum user report posted by an education system administrator, suggesting that the bug (green screen of death) has returned
Yes, utilities that are supposed to help your computer can get in the way of your computer Such is life
The good news? This bug is rare and has apparently been reported before In other words, it appears that Microsoft has found this bug again and can stop it in August, a Windows 10 Insider program user (access to Feedback Hub is required to see their notes) reported this problem: "After chkdsk runs was done, the PC rebooted again, tried to run another chkdsk and failed, tried to diagnose the startup issue and failed, and the recovery screen launched"
This is not particularly difficult to avoid Hopefully, you won't need to run Check Disk while Microsoft quietly fixes this bug in the background If you do need to use Check Disk and your system crashes, a reboot should get you back on track
Hopefully in the near future we will be able to run Check Disk using "chkdsk [drive letter]: /f" Since this utility is an important feature for power users, it is not hard to imagine that Microsoft would want to fix it as soon as possible
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