OK, I'm running an XP Pro x64 Dell here with 4GB of RAM, and two 160GB SATA HDD's. My C: drive has about 146 Gigs free space, and my D: drive has about 80 Gigs free space. This morning I started getting this error telling me that I could not complete an operation because the scratch disks are full.
I checked my setup, and I had C: defined as the first scratch disk, so I switched it to D: and restarted. Same deal. All I'm trying to do is crop a PSD file. No history in the buffer, no other activities under way. Open file, crop. No dice.
While Photoshop CS2 is running, I opened the Windows File Manager and checked the D: drive's properties. Sure enough, it showed no free space! I shut off Photoshop, and rechecked D's properties - 80 Gigabytes of free space available! That's GIGABYTES, not Megabytes. The PSD file is only 45 Megs, so I cannot fathom what Photoshop thinks it needs over 80 Gigs of space for.
I went in and changed a few settings; lowered History states to 10, Purge All, put the scratch disk back to C:, lowered Cache Levels to 2, Raised memory allocated to Photoshop to 100% (2786 Megabytes), and still I get that message. What the hell has changed since yesterday?
Anyone have any other ideas?
Steve



