TWEAK: Disable 8dot3 AND strip all your files from 8dot3 names


Recommended Posts

Tweak your win7 x64 to the max! Accelerate file system!

You have perhaps heard of disabling 8dot3 name creation on NTFS? Good. Did you knew that you can strip your disks, folders and files, including the system disk from 8dot3 names, which will accelerate your files system!

Run cmd with admin privileges, type: fsutil behavior set disable8dot3 1, then reboot.

Run cmd again with admin credentials and type: fsutil 8dot3name strip /f /s C:

Repeat strip for every drive/partition.

You will only notice a difference on drives with a large number of file (300K+) and a small number of folders. Could possibly break older programs which rely on the 8.3 file system.

There's really no reason to do this, and a reason not to. The performance increase wouldn't be noticeable and as previously mentioned older software and devices may not be able to read the files afterwards. Microsoft left that feature in for a purpose.

No, MS left it just because they were lazy. In the x64 nothing of 16-bit does not work. There is no need for 8dot3 names. It's remnant of the API that they did not much update, there's still a 260 character MAX_PATH limit in Win API that will still suffocate up much of anything in Windows. The 8dot3 name is a lousy and cheap gum and glue workaround. When 8dot3 names are disabled and stripped Windows is still able to remove over 260 char, as fsutil 8dot3name strip does not remove the 8.3 name from those files exceeding 260 char. Safely all tweakers can disable and strip 8dot3 names. It's a shame they left 260 char max path to x64 API while it could of only been left to x32 API. But as said, disabling and stripping will not take the functionality completely away and stripped system is able to remove the one's that exceed as those aren't even stripped, and in Win 7 installation there is some 90+ of those (paths/path+file). So your well safe with stripping and gain an accelerated file system.

No, MS left it just because they were lazy. In the x64 nothing of 16-bit does not work. There is no need for 8dot3 names. It's remnant of the API that they did not much update, there's still a 260 character MAX_PATH limit in Win API that will still suffocate up much of anything in Windows. The 8dot3 name is a lousy and cheap gum and glue workaround. When 8dot3 names are disabled and stripped Windows is still able to remove over 260 char, as fsutil 8dot3name strip does not remove the 8.3 name from those files exceeding 260 char. Safely all tweakers can disable and strip 8dot3 names. It's a shame they left 260 char max path to x64 API while it could of only been left to x32 API. But as said, disabling and stripping will not take the functionality completely away and stripped system is able to remove the one's that exceed as those aren't even stripped, and in Win 7 installation there is some 90+ of those (paths/path+file). So your well safe with stripping and gain an accelerated file system.

A lot of installers still rely on 8.3 tilde names.

A lot of installers still rely on 8.3 tilde names.

Which is a real shame :(

But for that reason and the fact that this "tweak" doesn't really give any extra performance, I would strongly suggest to NOT do this tweak

No, MS left it just because they were lazy. In the x64 nothing of 16-bit does not work. There is no need for 8dot3 names. It's remnant of the API that they did not much update, there's still a 260 character MAX_PATH limit in Win API that will still suffocate up much of anything in Windows. The 8dot3 name is a lousy and cheap gum and glue workaround. When 8dot3 names are disabled and stripped Windows is still able to remove over 260 char, as fsutil 8dot3name strip does not remove the 8.3 name from those files exceeding 260 char. Safely all tweakers can disable and strip 8dot3 names. It's a shame they left 260 char max path to x64 API while it could of only been left to x32 API. But as said, disabling and stripping will not take the functionality completely away and stripped system is able to remove the one's that exceed as those aren't even stripped, and in Win 7 installation there is some 90+ of those (paths/path+file). So your well safe with stripping and gain an accelerated file system.

8.3 is not a 16-bit only thing, it depends on the software or hardware device. Also just because you're running Windows 7 x64 for example, it doesn't mean that you will never need to access those files with an older device or program. Another thing, I had to clean an infection off someone's PC once and the malware used illegal file names to prevent it from being deleted manually. However I was able to delete them from a command prompt using the files' 8.3 names. Now it's true most people probably won't need them, but at the same time there's no reason to go in and start disabling stuff for no reason. It's not going to speed up your system.

I think MS themselfes say that stripping improves performance. The fsutil 8dot3name strip was introduced in Server 2008 and in Win 7 and it is a clear indication that the backwards compatibility will be ditched. And about the installers, none of the 16-bit installers work in x64 no matter how 32-bit the program itself is. Vista completely changed the installers to x64/x86 and Vista also changed - forced - how applications were and are written. No more crappy code that was able to execute in XP. Sure, some users will need 8dot3 names but the majority does not. Also in addition to 8dot3 tweaks disabling lastaccess timestamp accelerates file system. Take the 8dot3 tweak or not, i'm not forcing anyone, i'm just saying that there is very little point in 8.3.

The: fsutil behavior set disable8dot3 [1]

[0] Enables 8dot3 name creation for all volumes on the system.

[1] Disables 8dot3 name creation for all volumes on the system.

[2] Sets 8dot3 name creation on a per volume basis. (eg. 2 /e: /g:)

[3] Disables 8dot3 name creation for all volumes except the system volume.

Stripping 8dot3names creates a log file automatically and the command prompt will tell where the log file is. The stripping also scans registry and tells how many registry keys are affected. On Win 7 installation 4 registry keys are affected and all those 4 keys point to 4 .tmp files.

If stripping your files and system completely from 8dot3 names gives you doubts about one thing you can do is to test - no changes are made. To test the fsutil 8dot3name strip type the following to elevated command prompt: fsutil 8dot3name strip /T C:

----> Removal of 8dot3 file names is run in test mode. All operations except the actual removal of the 8dot3 file names are performed. You can use test mode to discover which registry keys point to files that use the 8dot3 file names.<--------

(I guess soon people will say fsutil repair is unneeded cuz there's always the boot time chkdsk (that takes ages for large disks). Repair and chkdsk have nothing to do here with 8dot3 disable & strip))

I can't see this having any affect on performance, since the 8.3 file name creation is a "once off" thing (It generates it when the file is created or renamed), and I can't imagine it being a slow operation (especially on any system built in the last decade)

As for it being a sign of reduced backwards compatibility, the ability to prevent the creation of 8.3 file names has existed for more than a decade, It was probably introduced with NT4 or so.

  • Like 1

is there a link to the source where MS say it improves performance? or maybe some performance statistics that show the difference?

i'm skeptical there would be much of a difference especially on systems such as quad core that we have today.

  • Like 1

is there a link to the source where MS say it improves performance? or maybe some performance statistics that show the difference?

i'm skeptical there would be much of a difference especially on systems such as quad core that we have today.

MS says it does improve performance (It does less work, so obviously it will be faster), but they're talking about decade old systems running 2K or XP. And even though it will improve performance I seriously doubt it's enough to matter (I doubt it was enough to matter a decade ago either)

MS says it does improve performance (It does less work, so obviously it will be faster), but they're talking about decade old systems running 2K or XP. And even though it will improve performance I seriously doubt it's enough to matter (I doubt it was enough to matter a decade ago either)

Thats what im thinking too :p

People your taking 8.3 too serious, after all, it's a tweak. And not everybody run on quadcore. I have a dualcore.

Not focusing on cores, I totally experience a faster file system, with 8.3 disabled and stripped. File operations like reading, writing, copying, moving, extracting, packing and even executing is faster. But the tweak is not poor mans SSD what everybody drools about, no, it won't give you a higher score on WEI index.

While disabling 8.3 is old from NT4 or so, strip is new! It's quite a long time Vista was released and two years after 7 was released. It is safe to strip 8.3.

And true it is, that strip has not been benchmarked. I too, am interested of benchmarks. While i'm happy about the reduced burden on disk - those things does not last forever in away mobo, cpu or ram can.

Not focusing on cores, I totally experience a faster file system, with 8.3 disabled and stripped. File operations like reading, writing, copying, moving, extracting, packing and even executing is faster.

Placebo effect.

No, MS left it just because they were lazy.

You just lost all your credibility.

Microsoft programmers are not lazy, stupid, bad, idiots, or whatever - someone who pretends to know an OS better than the guys who designed it should be ignored.

Unless you are willing to create an easily reproducible benchmarks which clearly shows the performance gain you are talking about..

To be fair there are certain situations where this is helpful and there are no drawbacks. Say you have thousands of media files on an external drive for example. Disabling short file names will probably improve performance in this situation, and there is certainly no need for your music, video files or photos to have 8.3 file names. They would also be disabled on servers obviously.

That said, I still don't recommend disabling it on your system drive. There's really going to be no noticeable improvement and its possibly going to break things; yes even on a modern x64 system. For example I just scanned my system drive with fsutil and it reported a large number of registry entries using short file names. It's not worth taking a chance on messing things up when you aren't going to see any real difference.

There's no need to "tweak" anything in Windows anymore. I keep saying this, Microsoft's programmers know what they're doing so if they left something in the OS then they left it in for a very good reason.

It's not safe to strip anything out of Windows, EVER. Remember the people who had issues with the Vista service packs, most of them used vLite to strip out what they thought was "bloat" and ended up crippling Windows. That's exactly what this "tweak" will do, you may not notice it now but I guarantee that at some point issues WILL come up.

The other thing to remember is that some 32-bit installers still call on 16-bit code and, possibly, 8dot3 filenames even on 64-bit systems.

Microsoft products run on a variety of systems and run a wide range of software, so unlike Apple they can't just strip out legacy code whenever they want.

@hardbag If you think you know better than the programmers that created Windows then go work for Microsoft, otherwise STFU.

The whole question of stripping files can be easily solved by someone running a before and after HDD benchmark, i would but i don't want to run the command on my Win7 machine and i don't think a VM will be an accurate test.

I think MS themselfes say that stripping improves performance. The fsutil 8dot3name strip was introduced in Server 2008 and in Win 7 and it is a clear indication that the backwards compatibility will be ditched. And about the installers, none of the 16-bit installers work in x64 no matter how 32-bit the program itself is. Vista completely changed the installers to x64/x86 and Vista also changed - forced - how applications were and are written.

You seem to be forgetting the part where Microsoft made custom Application Compatibility bootstrappers starting with Vista x64 to allow 16-bit installshield setup components to continue to operate... using 8.3 filenames obviously.

  • Like 3

You seem to be forgetting the part where Microsoft made custom Application Compatibility bootstrappers starting with Vista x64 to allow 16-bit installshield setup components to continue to operate... using 8.3 filenames obviously.

Exactly, hardbag seems to forget that Windows isn't like MacOS where they can just strip out legacy stuff with a minimal impact on users.

When I wrote that 8.3 was left because MS was lazy, I meant that. The poster who quoted should of quoted the whole post; 8.3 names are a cheap gum and glue; they could of recode x64 API but they left much of it like 32-bit API. Yes it is x64 but a lot of x86 code.

And as I and many said, stripping 8.3 will be good to go for many, but some users need them.

After stripping 7 installation there were 4 reg keys (pointing to 4 .tmp files) that could not be stripped because of exceeding 260, but that does not mean that the file system couldn't work with those files or delete them. With stripping, there is still compatibility.

The Vista compatibility was made because everybody was surprised how many installers were 16-bit. Now Vista completely changed how applications are written, no more 16-bit and no more crap code that could execute in XP. Unless you aren't using 6+ years old programs or devices (pc components do not count) it is safe to strip 8.3.

I have made quite a few 7 installations, stripped, installed service pack1, installed programs, installed games... No where anywhere no absolutely no problems. Of course I can't demonstrate the setups of thousands or millions of users, as said, for some, 8.3 could be needed.

But really why the 8.3 is still in the API is because the x64 API is a copy of 32-bit therefore it's just gum and glue, while they could of just recode 260 max path. That said, as earlier, despite stripping, 8.3 compatibility still exists - NTFS just does not automatically create 8.3 names and is able to srip 8.3 from files the OS does not see point of having.

When I wrote that 8.3 was left because MS was lazy, I meant that. The poster who quoted should of quoted the whole post; 8.3 names are a cheap gum and glue; they could of recode x64 API but they left much of it like 32-bit API. Yes it is x64 but a lot of x86 code.

Well of course there is x86 code, we are still using x86 processors. As for the 32-bit parts they left them in for a good reason; compatibility. People have come to expect that all of their existing software will continue to work with new versions of Windows. Microsoft couldn't just get rid of 32-bit support. That would be insanity. I don't know if you've noticed but even today the majority of software is still 32-bit. Microsoft is not lazy; they know what parts of the OS are still necessary.

As for short file names, they have nothing to do with the 32-bit API. They're a part of NTFS and they're still needed.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • You sound like some Ukrainians in Crimea before 2014: "I didn't vote for USSR disbanding - I want Ukraine to be part of Russia again" 🤣
    • Uninstalr 3.1 by Razvan Serea Introducing Uninstalr: Easy to use and very accurate software uninstaller for Windows. It can uninstall multiple apps at the same time and we think it’s pretty cool. Developed with expertise by Macecraft Software - the minds behind jv16 PowerTools. Key Features Batch uninstall many apps at the same time. Supports unattended uninstallation of apps. Supports monitoring of new software installations. Also detects portable apps and previously uninstalled software leftovers. Shows all the data added to your system by installed software on a file by file basis. Shows all the data it will remove before starting the uninstallation. Filter and search the list of installed software. According to our benchmark, Uninstalr is the most accurate software uninstaller by leaving the least amount of leftovers when uninstalling apps. Supports detection and uninstallation of Microsoft Store, Steam, Big Fish Game System, Chocolatey, NuGet and Ninite installed software. Supports Windows Dark Mode. Supports Windows 11, 10, 8 and 7. Comes with these translations builtin: Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional, Czech, Danish, English, Filipino, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Hindi, Hungarian, Indonesian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Malay, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Slovak, Spanish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish, Ukrainian and Vietnamese. Has a single executable file portable version and a normal setup version. Uninstalr is freeware, lightweight and easy to use. No bells and whistles, no nonsense. Uninstalr’s custom uninstallation engine has a dedicated support for the detection and uninstallation of 15 types of apps: Normal Windows apps Microsoft Store apps Portable apps Chocolatey apps Ninite apps PortableApps.com apps Steam games EA App games Epic Games Store games Riot platform games GOG Galaxy games WarGaming.net games Battle.net games itch.io games Big Fish platform games Uninstalr 3.1 changelog: Key Changes Uninstalr now starts and shows the list of installed apps faster after the initial scan has been completed, and with much smaller memory usage. Uninstalr now detects and highlights apps that automatically start with Windows. Greatly improved the detection of portable apps. Improvements New feature: Uninstalr now detects and highlights apps that automatically start with Windows. New feature: Uninstalr now highlights possible leftovers and apps from Russia and China. This can be disabled from the Settings. New feature: A new filter that allows you to show only software that is installed to other than the system drive. New feature: Users can now select to always do the deepest and the most accurate scan for installed apps, at the cost of the analysis taking a longer time. Greatly improved the detection of portable apps, such as added dedicated support for MiTeC, EZ Tools and SysInternals tools. Improved support for portable apps installed via Windows System Control Center (WSCC). NirSoft portable apps are now listed with "NirSoft" prefix for easier identification. Improved the speed of uninstalling apps. The main installed software listing search will now find "Xbox GameBar" if you search for "Game bar" and vice versa. The tooltip now displays more detailed information of the installed apps, such as its registry key and uninstaller path. The links in the About section now look more like clickable links. The main menu is now more clearly indicated in the main user interface. Microsoft Teams Meeting Add-in for Microsoft Office ships with some Windows 11 installations and is now considered a builtin Windows app and only listed if builtin Windows apps filter is enabled. Added a Help button to the main user interface that opens the help section of the website. Added an option not to close Uninstalr after uninstallation. If you open the Uninstalr website from the app, the website now receives the version number of your current Uninstalr version and warns you if you are using anything but the latest version. Improved the accuracy of the New Software Monitor. Improved confirmation messages for Steam and other platform related uninstalls. Improved the uninstallation performance of Steam games. Fixes: Known bug fixed: Some installed app names are capitalized incorrectly, such as "CCleaner Portable" is listed as "ccleaner portable". Known bug fixed: Some apps can be listed twice, for example, Smart Defrag can be listed once as Smart Defrag and then Smart Defrag Home. Known bug fixed: On the pre-uninstallation screen, the Scripts checkbox can be checked by default on Dark Mode but not on the normal mode. Known bug fixed: Perform Deep Analysis can be started only by clicking the button, not via the Right Click menu, main menu or F4 keyboard shortcut. Muse Hub could be incorrectly listed as Adobe Muse. SyncTrayzor was incorrectly detected as two unrelated software, SyncTrayzor and Syncthing. Smart Defrag was incorrectly listed twice as Smart Defrag 11 and Smart Defrag Home. It was possible to enter non-printable characters to the search input boxes of the main screen, and the path listing screen, which caused the UI to look funny. Changing the translation from Settings, especially many times in a row, caused the UI to distort. If you had multiple instances of portable apps on your system, such as the 64b and 32b versions of the same portable app, typically only one of them was detected, not both. In some very rare cases, Uninstalr UI could start with random characters in its search input boxes, which could make the UI look rather confusing. This was a rare issue, only reported by two users. The pre-uninstallation screen could display non-existing paths for example as the software's installation directory or main exe file. This was a cosmetic issue. New Software Monitor cannot detect the installation of Claude. Selecting all the found software made the UI look funny with the top panel covering everything else (because the names of all the selected software were listed there). Sometimes a Steam game could be listed a normal app instead of a Steam game. If the system restart after an uninstallation is delayed, e.g. because of Windows Updates being installed, this additional delay is incorrectly added to the time how long the uninstallation process took. This cosmetic bug could cause the program incorrectly report an uninstallation time longer than the actual uninstallation time. Uninstalling Minecraft could simply fail. The Only scan the system drive for installed apps setting does not fully work. If some apps are installed to a non system drive and this setting is enabled, the app could still be detected and listed on the main user interface. Changing any settings could also incorrectly alter the Only Scan The System Drive For Installed Apps setting. Microsoft OneDrive and Copilot are not always detected. If you enter something to the search filter field, then select the text and press the Delete key, this triggers the Uninstall button click even if your intent was to delete the text input. If you press the F5 key to refresh the screen during the uninstallation loading screen, the program will crash. If you enabled some setting, such as "Do not analyze installed app installation sizes", it could automatically be unchecked later. Uninstalr doesn't warn you if you try to remove Fortec antivirus. There should be a warning if user attempts to remove any antivirus or antimalware type program. Such programs should not be uninstalled using a third party uninstaller, as they are typically protected against automated uninstallation, for security reasons. With "Do not analyze installed app installation sizes" option checked from the Settings, Uninstalr could still display some installation size related elements in the UI which was confusing. The "Only scan the system drive" option moved under Improve Scan Speed from the General settings. If two software have the exact same name and version number, selecting both of them for uninstallation fails because only one is actually selected. Sorting the installed apps by size sometimes fails and the order is incorrect. The "Don't show which paths are currently analyzed" did not work correctly - some parts of the UI still show the currently analyzed path with this setting checked. The "Don't list software less than 10 MB" filter did not work correctly - some apps smaller than 10 MB could still be listed. Uninstalr could start very quickly and display an empty list of detected apps. Restarting the app usually fixed the issue and the list of installed apps was properly displayed. If you placed portable Uninstalr to a same folder with other portable apps, those were not detected because Uninstalr automatically added its installation folder to the ignore list. When trying to uninstall some specific software, Uninstalr could get stuck on the Searching for more data relating to the app phase. Uninstalr could sometimes do a silent uninstallation even if user had unchecked the Perform a silent uninstallation option. Known issues: Uninstalr can fail to run with an Out Of Memory error in systems that have a lot of installed apps. Using the New Software Monitor tool multiple times during one session can cause the program to get stuck on the Scanning stage. The "uninstallation completed" message box sometimes closes when the user moves the mouse cursor over the button before user clicks it. There is no feedback for the user after Fix Information feature has been used. The Right Click menu's Select by publisher option can display the number of apps per each publisher without correct vertical alignment. The default user interface might not display all of the found installed apps if you have over 600 installed apps. If you do, using the Screen Reader Compatible Interface solves the issue. Leftover apptype filter checkbox is shown in red font only in Dark Mode. Clicking the app's icon from the Windows Taskbar doesn't minimize/restore the app like other apps. The warning about an app that user wishes to uninstall being related to some other app user did not select can sometimes be inaccurate. If app's language is changed without restarting Uninstalr, the list of installed software might not automatically refresh. When software is being uninstalled, the UI can say it is processing paths unrelating to the uninstalled app. This is purely cosmetic and does not mean these paths are removed. Uninstalr might not properly detect and/or uninstall Steam games if they are installed to a drive different than Steam's default location in C:\. You might see "This action is only valid for products that are currently installed" error message from Windows Installer during uninstallation. This is a cosmetic issue. Download: Uninstalr 3.1 | 7.1 MB (Free, paid version available) Download: Uninstalr Setup 3.1 View: Uninstalr Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • I and many others did not vote to get out of the E.u because of Putin or Farage, we did so for our own reasons. You don't have to tel me what my own did or did not do when it comes to the E.U. The EEC is or was the European Economic Community, a different beast to what the E.U is now.The EEC was a mainly about trading, the E.U have gone far beyond that and as I have said before, is now more of a United States of Europe. The U.K did not vote to join a United States of Europe. Anyway, they did not want us in there in the first place, Charles de Gaulle stopped us joining as he claimed we didn’t agree with the core ideas of integration. He was not wrong and that is why we voted out of the E.U when the time came. I was not old enough to vote the first time. My only regret is that we did not have the referendum years ago and got out years ago. If we rejoined, we would have to agree to join the Euro and no doubt Schengen, agree with freedom of movement, we have enough problem with people coming over here as it is. i have no problem with people coming over here if they work and don't try to push their way of life onto us. The E.U has a currency, freedom of movement, an anthem a flag, a parliament, well they are there, not sure if they do anything. Don't sound like something that is just for trading. Oh yeah, also wanted a euro Army. How many stupid rules have the E.U made that we had to follow? I doubt I will see the Uk rejoin the E.U, which suits me. Oh yeah, my partner is Polish, she came over here before Poland joined the E.U and she got fed up of people just coming over here with ease, while she had to struggle. She is now a British citizen and have been for a fair few years
    • Hello, Paul. Thanks for the editorial. It was interesting. I'm going research more into the app and its concept. Of course, if you know me at all, you know that I'd say your articles needs some editing! I always do, don't I? For instance, the article occasionally mentions relays before defining it.
    • Screamer is 50% off on Steam, making it £24.99 here in the UK: https://store.steampowered.com/app/2814990/Screamer/ You might remember the series from the mid 90s / early 2000s, this new game is also by Milestone who created the older games.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Woland13 earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      Woland13 earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Year In
      bernmeister earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      495
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      226
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      153
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      75
    5. 5
      FloatingFatMan
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!