I'm new to Blue Iris, and shortly after setting things up, I'm getting the following !! C: -2.19T at the bottom of the screen (see attached). I'm guessing that it's related to the Clips error shown in the status attachment.
Does anyone have an idea as to how to correct this?
You've over allocated space to BI on your C: drive. Post a screen shot of the storage tab and screen shots of you storage allocation from the configuration page.
Best practice is to write once rather than move files from drive to drive, IE new on C: to stored on D;. Just write everything to new on D: to reduce CPU utilization moving files needlessly. Also you need to leave 5-10% of free space on a drive for BI to work with as file sizes shrink and grow. If you have a net of 7TB on a drive, leave at east 35GB of unused space.
Here are the screenshots of the setup. I'm using a 6TB HDD as one big partition. So it sounds like I will want to create a new partition D:??
Do you have a recommended setup? It's all new so not a big issue to modify the setup.
Your C: drive has a net space of 5.5TB. You're allocating 4.5TB to stored and another 10GB to new for a total of 4.510TB. That leaves roughly 1GB for everything else. Throw in Windows OS and anything else on there and you're allocating more space than the drive has.
The screen shot I'm looking for is from the console, click the lightning bolt graph on the upper left, then click on the disk tab. That will show you exactly where you're going wrong. Post a shot of that.
Again moving from new to stored is totally unnecessary and just wastes disk time and CPU utilization. Look in the help file from the file allocation page and read the information there. This is, basically, all covered there. Read and follow SouthernYankees comments as well. Very solid advice. Most folks here use an M2 or SSD drive in the 500GB range for the OS/boot drive and a separate drive for video storage.
+1^^ re: SSD
I have a 500GB Samsung EVO 870 SSD for Windows 10, BI and BI's "db" folder; video clips to 4TB WD Purple (surveillance-rated) HDD.
If you go that route, do a fresh install of Win 10 on the SSD using the MS Media Creation Tool, put on a good flash drive, it'll install in about 15 minutes.
Your C: drive has a net space of 5.5TB. You're allocating 4.5TB to stored and another 10GB to new for a total of 4.510TB. That leaves roughly 1GB for everything else. Throw in Windows OS and anything else on there and you're allocating more space than the drive has.
The screen shot I'm looking for is from the console, click the lightning bolt graph on the upper left, then click on the disk tab. That will show you exactly where you're going wrong. Post a shot of that.
Again moving from new to stored is totally unnecessary and just wastes disk time and CPU utilization. Look in the help file from the file allocation page and read the information there. This is, basically, all covered there. Read and follow SouthernYankees comments as well. Very solid advice. Most folks here use an M2 or SSD drive in the 500GB range for the OS/boot drive and a separate drive for video storage.
Yeas, that's the one and it makes no sense at all. It shows no other files on the C: drive. If C: is your boot/OS drive, as is the normal case, it should show some other files.
What is the full configuration of the machine? Processor model, not just type. Disks installed. Memory. Is it a virtual box?
Still doesn't make sense since the OS is on that same drive. What's really puzzling is the lack of those files showing in BI and BI saying the drive size is "unknown". Maybe somebody else has an idea.
Have you tried reducing the size of "stored" at all to see if the warning goes away?
Yes, I had to reduce it from the previous 5TB down to 2.1 and that corrected the alert. Bad thing is that I'm not taking advantage of the full 6TB drive for BI... Maybe the drive is too large? or it doesn't understand NTFS partitions?
At this point, I'm thinking of just rebuilding it with a 250 GB SSD and using the 6TB drive as the primary storage for the clips.
I had a similar issue and in my case it was the drive holding onto restore points. They do not show in the usual places when looking at why your drive is over-allocating. It is trying to account for all the storage that is going to happen.
So go here and drop the max usage way down and delete the restore points. I suspect what you will see is current usage is taking a lot. In my case, it was half the available capacity.
Ok, I think i found the issue as to why mine is showing differently than yours. Mine had the setting checked for Do NOT monitor free space. Once i unchecked it, this is what i got:
I had a similar issue and in my case it was the drive holding onto restore points. They do not show in the usual places when looking at why your drive is over-allocating. It is trying to account for all the storage that is going to happen.
So go here and drop the max usage way down and delete the restore points. I suspect what you will see is current usage is taking a lot. In my case, it was half the available capacity.