

IF EXIST B:\TEMP\Cache_Firefox (SET printLine=%printLine% Firefox) ELSE SET printLine=%printLine% & START "" /MAX "%folderLogFile%" & MD B:\TEMP\Cache_Firefox IF EXIST B:\TEMP\Cache_Chrome (SET printLine=%printLine% Chrome) ELSE SET printLine=%printLine% & START "" /MAX "%folderLogFile%" & MD B:\TEMP\Cache_Chrome SET folderLogFile=B:\CheckFoldersPresent.txt If they are the same, it just records the folder names. If they are different, it launches Notepad and recreates the folders. I wrote a script that runs continuously on both machines that checks the presence of the folders every 5 seconds. I suspected that the one at work might have some crazy admin policy, but the one at home is pure and not customized at all (nothing unorthodox). One machine is controlled by the IT guys, and the other one is personal at home. The behavior is the same on both machines. The difference between my RamDisk and yours is that mines are FAT32 on one computer and exFAT on another one.

I am sorry, but I didn't figure out how to add pictures to the reply. For that, in an elevated command prompt type This will permanently deactivate the hybrid boot as well.

REG ADD "HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager\Power" /V HiberbootEnabled /T REG_DWORD /D 0 /FĪlternatively, if you don't hibernate your PC and want to save a few GBs of disk space, you can disable hibernation. We recommend disabling it for correct operation. Your system may have the hybrid boot enabled. This would initialise the RAM disk much earlier in the system boot before any third-party applications may interfere. If you are using a logon-time RAM disk, try using a boot-time one instead. If that doesn't help, there are a few more things to try: You could try a different file system for this RAM disk, e.g. We also run some more tests creating the exact copy of your structure multiple times, and every time it is created successfully: The nested folder support for boot-time RAM disks has been added in version 4.0.4, and we have never seen any partially created folders in our tests.
