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#1
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What time is it?
Everything seems to be there since I swapped disk drives in my desktop computer, but today I clicked on the time display down in the lower right corner of the screen that usually brings up a clock and lets you set the computer's time. Nothing happened. Right-clicking on the time brings up the pop-up menu, but clicking on Adjust Date/Time does nothing. It appears that the application (probably a DLL file) didn't make it through the disk- to-disk copy. How can I find out what it is, or replace it? Seems like whenever I run SFC, something breaks so I don't want to do that blindly. Nor do I want to reload Windows. Nor do I want to upgrade to XP. I don't want much, I just want to watch my clock go around. This is Windows 2000, and I don't see Date/Time on the Control Panel. I can't remember if it was ever there. |
#2
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Recently, Mike Rivers posted:
What time is it? Everything seems to be there since I swapped disk drives in my desktop computer, but today I clicked on the time display down in the lower right corner of the screen that usually brings up a clock and lets you set the computer's time. Nothing happened. Right-clicking on the time brings up the pop-up menu, but clicking on Adjust Date/Time does nothing. It appears that the application (probably a DLL file) didn't make it through the disk- to-disk copy. How can I find out what it is, or replace it? Seems like whenever I run SFC, something breaks so I don't want to do that blindly. Nor do I want to reload Windows. Nor do I want to upgrade to XP. I don't want much, I just want to watch my clock go around. This is Windows 2000, and I don't see Date/Time on the Control Panel. I can't remember if it was ever there. Date and time are in the "Control Panel Regional Options". If it's missing, I can't help you... Neil |
#3
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On Dec 17, 6:29 pm, "Neil Gould" wrote:
Date and time are in the "Control Panel Regional Options". If it's missing, I can't help you... That was the problem, but I found it in a roundabout way. |
#4
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![]() An interesting problem, now solved. The missing file was timedate.cpl. I was able to locate the compressed version on the Windows installation disk, expand it, put it where it belongs (system32 folder) and got my clock back. Actually, the file name was there, but it was zero bytes in length, so useless. Probably if it wasn't there at all, I might have had a clue with a "file not found" message. Conquering Windows, one problem at a time. g |
#5
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Mike Rivers wrote:
An interesting problem, now solved. The missing file was timedate.cpl. I was able to locate the compressed version on the Windows installation disk, expand it, put it where it belongs (system32 folder) and got my clock back. Actually, the file name was there, but it was zero bytes in length, so useless. Probably if it wasn't there at all, I might have had a clue with a "file not found" message. Except that the file was found, but empty. Conquering Windows, one problem at a time. g Windows 2000 also has a repair procedure. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#6
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
An interesting problem, now solved. The missing file was timedate.cpl. I was able to locate the compressed version on the Windows installation disk, expand it, put it where it belongs (system32 folder) and got my clock back. Actually, the file name was there, but it was zero bytes in length, so useless. Probably if it wasn't there at all, I might have had a clue with a "file not found" message. Conquering Windows, one problem at a time. g Conquering Windows, one pain at a time. :-) |
#7
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Richard Crowley wrote:
"Mike Rivers" wrote ... An interesting problem, now solved. The missing file was timedate.cpl. I was able to locate the compressed version on the Windows installation disk, expand it, put it where it belongs (system32 folder) and got my clock back. Actually, the file name was there, but it was zero bytes in length, so useless. Probably if it wasn't there at all, I might have had a clue with a "file not found" message. Conquering Windows, one problem at a time. g Conquering Windows, one pain at a time. :-) ....or as my old song goes: [to the tune of "16 Tons" ] (chorus) Re-boot 16 times, what do you get Another error message or the blue screen of death My registry's corrupted and the re-boot's slow I got my bugs from the Microsoft store [ ... ] Later... Ron Capik [aka: the NJ Editorial Minstrel] -- |
#8
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In article 592a02f4-6997-4f22-846c-
, says... On Dec 17, 6:29 pm, "Neil Gould" wrote: Date and time are in the "Control Panel Regional Options". If it's missing, I can't help you... That was the problem, but I found it in a roundabout way. nistime (http://tf.nist.gov/service/its.htm) is free and works very well. I've had problems with XP Pro reporting problems setting the clock via timeservers on the internet. I told it not to bother; nistime does the job. -- reverse my name in email address |
#9
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![]() "Ron Capik" wrote in message.... ...or as my old song goes: [to the tune of "16 Tons" ] (chorus) Re-boot 16 times, what do you get Another error message or the blue screen of death My registry's corrupted and the re-boot's slow I got my bugs from the Microsoft store [ ... ] OOOOOO000000000ooooooooooooouch............... :-\ |
#10
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... An interesting problem, now solved. The missing file was timedate.cpl. I guess the question should be... where the heck did it go? I was able to locate the compressed version on the Windows installation disk, expand it, put it where it belongs (system32 folder) and got my clock back. Actually, the file name was there, but it was zero bytes in length, so useless. Probably if it wasn't there at all, I might have had a clue with a "file not found" message. Now *that* is interesting work. Did you determine that the file value is 0 if it happens to be turned off ?? Conquering Windows, one problem at a time. g You betcha'...... Vini Vidi Vici.... or something like that. |
#11
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"Jason" wrote in message
In article 592a02f4-6997-4f22-846c- , says... On Dec 17, 6:29 pm, "Neil Gould" wrote: Date and time are in the "Control Panel Regional Options". If it's missing, I can't help you... That was the problem, but I found it in a roundabout way. nistime (http://tf.nist.gov/service/its.htm) is free and works very well. I've had problems with XP Pro reporting problems setting the clock via timeservers on the internet. I told it not to bother; nistime does the job. Nistime works for me when the built-in XP facility doesn't. I don't turn the XP facility off, though. Eventually it seems to get through, I just don't always have the time to wait. |
#12
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On Dec 17, 10:52 pm, Jason wrote:
nistime (http://tf.nist.gov/service/its.htm) is free and works very well. You apparently didn't understand my question. The problem wasn't that I couldn't set the clock, but that the piece of Windows that's the user interface for setting the clock was missing. While there may be better aftermarket programs for keeping the clock accurate (I use one called Atomic Clock Sync) I just wanted to restore what Windows expects. |
#13
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On Dec 18, 3:34 am, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm
wrote: Did you determine that the file value is 0 if it happens to be turned off ?? I dunno. How do you turn it off? What I'm talking about is the file size shown by File Explorer. If it's zero, there's just an entry in the directory with the file name, but no data in the file. Since this isn't the file that holds the time (the computer did know what time it is) there's no reason for it to be empty except that no data was copied into it from the old disk drive. As I said in a previous discussion, the old disk had some bad and apparently uncorrectable spots on it, so some things didn't work. That's why I needed to replace it. Apparently the disk-to-disk copy utility that I used (the one that came with the new Western Digital drive) didn't bother me with such details as "can't read sector 02347A3D" while copying, it just skipped whatever it couldn't do. I also noticed that I didn't have any data in one of my Thunderbird mailboxes, but I had all that mail on another computer, so I could restore it easily. |
#14
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Mike Rivers wrote:
On Dec 18, 3:34 am, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm wrote: Did you determine that the file value is 0 if it happens to be turned off ?? I dunno. How do you turn it off? What I'm talking about is the file size shown by File Explorer. If it's zero, there's just an entry in the directory with the file name, but no data in the file. Correct. As I said in a previous discussion, the old disk had some bad and apparently uncorrectable spots on it, so some things didn't work. That's why I needed to replace it. Apparently the disk-to-disk copy utility that I used (the one that came with the new Western Digital drive) didn't bother me with such details as "can't read sector 02347A3D" while copying, it just skipped whatever it couldn't do Something along that line, yes ... but it may also be that a chkdsk event led to a disk repair with loss of file data. Drive Imaging software often as a panel full of options, but possibly not the ones that come with a new drive in retail pack. Kind regards Peter Larsen |
#15
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
You apparently didn't understand my question. The problem wasn't that I couldn't set the clock, but that the piece of Windows that's the user interface for setting the clock was missing. The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. |
#16
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On Dec 18, 11:58 am, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. "Repair" is on the original installation CD. How does it take service pack updates into account? If all it knows about is the original version of the files it's checking (and replacing) how does it know it isn't looking at a service pack update of that file (corrupted or not)? |
#17
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote: The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. "Repair" is on the original installation CD. How does it take service pack updates into account? If all it knows about is the original version of the files it's checking (and replacing) how does it know it isn't looking at a service pack update of that file (corrupted or not)? If it finds the same file with a newer revision number (embedded) or file date, it typically asks if you want to replace a newer version with the older verison. OTOH, if you know exactly which file you need, just grab it out of the installation and copy it into place. |
#18
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"Mike Rivers" wrote in message
the old disk had some bad and apparently uncorrectable spots on it, so some things didn't work. That's why I needed to replace it. Apparently the disk-to-disk copy utility that I used (the one that came with the new Western Digital drive) didn't bother me with such details as "can't read sector 02347A3D" while copying, it just skipped whatever it couldn't do. Most disk copying software will fail after finding the first unreadible sector. More likely - the disk was reporting correct reading to the copy program, even when there were failures. I've seen this happen many times. |
#19
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On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 10:19:18 -0800, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: "Repair" is on the original installation CD. How does it take service pack updates into account? If all it knows about is the original version of the files it's checking (and replacing) how does it know it isn't looking at a service pack update of that file (corrupted or not)? If it finds the same file with a newer revision number (embedded) or file date, it typically asks if you want to replace a newer version with the older verison. You're talking about "The 'repair' option for the OS installation" which can only be understood as meaning a full Repair Installation. This is a very large sledgehammer to crack the small nut of one missing file! There are, indeed, issues with using a pre-SP2 installation CD to perform a Repair Installation on an updated Windows. (You can slipstream SP2 into your installation disk, but I confidently guarantee that Mike doesn't want to know that advanced bit of computing technique :-) Are you maybe confusing a Repair Installation with the System File Checker, a much simpler utility? http://www.updatexp.com/scannow-sfc.html |
#20
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On Dec 18, 1:19 pm, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
OTOH, if you know exactly which file you need, just grab it out of the installation and copy it into place. That's what I did, but it took a bit of digging to find out what file I needed. What finally got it for me was a search through the Windows knowledge base which got me to an article about running control panel functions from the command line. It listed the function (Date/Time) and the command (command timedate.cpl). |
#21
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In article 8640a995-5ce6-45a3-8381-2953a1e04637
@l1g2000hsa.googlegroups.com, says... I just wanted to restore what Windows expects. Sometimes this works: run the windows command-line program, sfc. System File Checker will ask for your installation CD and then ..slowly.. paw through all the Windows component files to see if they're damaged and will replace missing ones. It's smart enough to know about updates and service packs that have changed files since their original installation. It frequently does nothing useful, but it has repaired my xp system a time or two. Syntax is sfc /scannow Jason -- reverse my name in email address |
#22
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"Laurence Payne" wrote ...
This is a very large sledgehammer to crack the small nut of one missing file! But then you convienently snipped the next sentence which suggested simply identifying the missing file and grabbing it out of the installation to replace it. |
#23
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On Dec 18, 4:34 pm, Jason wrote:
Sometimes this works: run the windows command-line program, sfc. That was going to be my first approach, but I thought that this was just a corrupt or missing program and SFC both takes a long time, sometimes replaces things that shouldn't be replaced, sometimes does nothing, and is a pain because you need to insert exactly the right disk (the one the OS was installed from - or at least one of exactly the same version) and I have three Win2000 disks here and I usually pick the wrong one first time through. My actual question was not what to do about it, but what was the name of the file that I was missing. So far nobody got that but me. |
#24
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On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 15:20:06 -0800, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: "Laurence Payne" wrote ... This is a very large sledgehammer to crack the small nut of one missing file! But then you convienently snipped the next sentence which suggested simply identifying the missing file and grabbing it out of the installation to replace it. No, YOU snipped it :-) Here's your entire post: "Mike Rivers" wrote ... You apparently didn't understand my question. The problem wasn't that I couldn't set the clock, but that the piece of Windows that's the user interface for setting the clock was missing. The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. |
#25
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On Dec 18, 8:04 pm, Laurence Payne NOSPAMlpayne1ATdsl.pipex.com
wrote: The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. Will it tell me what it did to make the repair? Will I learn anything from using it? |
#26
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"Laurence Payne" wrote ...
"Richard Crowley" wrote: "Laurence Payne" wrote ... This is a very large sledgehammer to crack the small nut of one missing file! But then you convienently snipped the next sentence which suggested simply identifying the missing file and grabbing it out of the installation to replace it. No, YOU snipped it :-) Here's your entire post: "Mike Rivers" wrote ... You apparently didn't understand my question. The problem wasn't that I couldn't set the clock, but that the piece of Windows that's the user interface for setting the clock was missing. The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. No, Mr. Payne, that was NOT my entire post. Since you seem to have missed the last sentence, here it is again... OTOH, if you know exactly which file you need, just grab it out of the installation and copy it into place. If you are unable to read the entire messages, you might want to check your newsreader client or your NNTP service. |
#27
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On Tue, 18 Dec 2007 19:31:12 -0800, "Richard Crowley"
wrote: The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. No, Mr. Payne, that was NOT my entire post. Since you seem to have missed the last sentence, here it is again... OTOH, if you know exactly which file you need, just grab it out of the installation and copy it into place. If you are unable to read the entire messages, you might want to check your newsreader client or your NNTP service. Not that it really matters, but seeing as you're calling me a liar - Here's what I got at 16.58 GMT yesterday. Did you think there was more? ................................ "Mike Rivers" wrote ... You apparently didn't understand my question. The problem wasn't that I couldn't set the clock, but that the piece of Windows that's the user interface for setting the clock was missing. The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. .................................... In a later post you elaborated a little. Quoted in full below. You were still confusing the issue. A Repair Installation asks no questions, it just re-installs everything. There's the Recovery Console as well of course. But you wouldn't be recommending that for a Windows that started up OK but just had one corrupt cpl file? ..................................... The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. "Repair" is on the original installation CD. How does it take service pack updates into account? If all it knows about is the original version of the files it's checking (and replacing) how does it know it isn't looking at a service pack update of that file (corrupted or not)? If it finds the same file with a newer revision number (embedded) or file date, it typically asks if you want to replace a newer version with the older verison. OTOH, if you know exactly which file you need, just grab it out of the installation and copy it into place. |
#28
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"Laurence Payne" wrote ...
Not that it really matters, but seeing as you're calling me a liar - Google Groups says you are mistaken. I'll leave it at that since it isn't worth arguing. |
#29
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Posted to rec.audio.pro
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 8:04 pm, Laurence Payne NOSPAMlpayne1ATdsl.pipex.com wrote: The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. Will it tell me what it did to make the repair? Will I learn anything from using it? You will learn never to use it again unless your whole system is failing miserably with little chance for a manual intervention. It *will* eradicate all MS Updates, etc., though I'm not certain that 2K even offers this function. I've used it on a few XP boxes, usually resulting in the decision to back up and do a complete clean install. Repair is essentially a complete install over the top of the current OS, and can lead to all sorts of anomalies. |
#30
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 4:34 pm, Jason wrote: Sometimes this works: run the windows command-line program, sfc. That was going to be my first approach, but I thought that this was just a corrupt or missing program and SFC both takes a long time, sometimes replaces things that shouldn't be replaced, sometimes does nothing, and is a pain because you need to insert exactly the right disk (the one the OS was installed from - or at least one of exactly the same version) and I have three Win2000 disks here and I usually pick the wrong one first time through. My actual question was not what to do about it, but what was the name of the file that I was missing. So far nobody got that but me. Not too many people are still in the habit of recognizing .cpl... or Command Prompt (DOS) files these days. |
#31
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... On Dec 18, 3:34 am, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm wrote: Did you determine that the file value is 0 if it happens to be turned off ?? I dunno. How do you turn it off? Right click on the clock (if on) or anywhere in a blank section of the taskbar (if off)... select "properties" and you will see on the first tabbed page, a tick-box option to show or not to show the clock. What I'm talking about is the file size shown by File Explorer. If it's zero, there's just an entry in the directory with the file name, but no data in the file. Since this isn't the file that holds the time (the computer did know what time it is) there's no reason for it to be empty except that no data was copied into it from the old disk drive. Hmmm... though I haven't had the issue, it seems like System File Checker or perhaps choosing "repair errors" while running Scan Disk should have brought these things forward. You have immense patience. Had I been in your shoes, with as much crap as you have loaded into your systems for reviewing hardware and associated software and or accompaning drivers, etc., I would never "copied" the bloated and likely (or perhaps obviously) corrupted drive to beging with, but rather done a completely clean install of 2K, slaved the old drive, and collected missing personal files (mail, documents, addys, etc.) later. As I said in a previous discussion, the old disk had some bad and apparently uncorrectable spots on it, so some things didn't work. That's why I needed to replace it. Apparently the disk-to-disk copy utility that I used (the one that came with the new Western Digital drive) didn't bother me with such details as "can't read sector 02347A3D" while copying, it just skipped whatever it couldn't do. If you feel as though you may be doing this multiple times in the coming years, or doing it for other people, I recommend Acronis True Image 8. My personal experience has been that anything which comes bundled with a HD is a frisbee. You have exemplary patience.... hopefully, not to your detriment in that you just didn't do a clean install. DM |
#32
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On Dec 19, 2:17 pm, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm
wrote: Not too many people are still in the habit of recognizing .cpl... or Command Prompt (DOS) files these days. Yeah, and they probably don't know how to change the oil in their car, either. ![]() |
#33
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On Dec 19, 2:28 pm, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm
wrote: Had I been in your shoes, with as much crap as you have loaded into your systems for reviewing hardware and associated software and or accompaning drivers, etc., I would never "copied" the bloated and likely (or perhaps obviously) corrupted drive to beging with This is the "desk" computer. The only thing I do relative to reviews on it is write them and gather data from the 'net. About the only non- conputer stuff for which there's a driver loaded is my digital camera and the Nomad Jukebox 3. Drivers for audio gear and audio software get loaded on the old laptop that isn't used for anything else nowadays except for net surfing in the living room. If you feel as though you may be doing this multiple times in the coming years, or doing it for other people, I recommend Acronis True Image 8. I started out using Norton Ghost, but that complained about not having a perfect disk to clone, so rather than try to make it perfect with Scandisk and maybe make it worse, I decided to try the Western Digital program, which apparently did the best it could. |
#34
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![]() "Mike Rivers" wrote in message ... On Dec 19, 2:28 pm, "David Morgan \(MAMS\)" /Odm wrote: Had I been in your shoes, with as much crap as you have loaded into your systems for reviewing hardware and associated software and or accompaning drivers, etc., I would never "copied" the bloated and likely (or perhaps obviously) corrupted drive to begin with This is the "desk" computer. The only thing I do relative to reviews on it is write them and gather data from the 'net. About the only non- conputer stuff for which there's a driver loaded is my digital camera and the Nomad Jukebox 3. Drivers for audio gear and audio software get loaded on the old laptop that isn't used for anything else nowadays except for net surfing in the living room. OK.. If you feel as though you may be doing this multiple times in the coming years, or doing it for other people, I recommend Acronis True Image 8. I started out using Norton Ghost, but that complained about not having a perfect disk to clone, so rather than try to make it perfect with Scandisk and maybe make it worse, I decided to try the Western Digital program, which apparently did the best it could. At least you're back up and running.... and if the clock anomaly is the only issue you're dealing with... you're a lucky man. ;-) Actually... True Image 8 has yielded me a problem or two this year on XP. DM |
#35
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"Mike Rivers" wrote ...
The "repair" option for the OS installation takes care of this kind of problem painlessly. Recommended. Will it tell me what it did to make the repair? Will I learn anything from using it? I've never seen it report what it was repairing. But there may be some "diagnostic" mode where it will tell you which files it is replacing, etc. |
#36
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On Dec 19, 6:50 pm, "Richard Crowley" wrote:
The "repair" option for the OS installation I've never seen it report what it was repairing. But there may be some "diagnostic" mode where it will tell you which files it is replacing, etc. Not that I've ever seen. If it's there, it must be a command line switch that only those in the know who care know. |
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