since some time now I try to figure out how to correctly setup this new UWF (Unified Write Filter). Unfortunately it seems there is only documentation for Win 8.1 industry (here), not for Win 10. I hope there were no relevant changes since.
I also asked this on the WindowsDevCenter but got no response so far.
Here is my problem:
With the WMI providers I got UWF enabled by now (UWF_Filter.Enable()
), but I cannot protect any volume.
Also the volume list looks very strange: There are 4 entrys, everyone is with CurrentSession=True
.
- The first is for an volume with no drive letter, only a volume id.
- The second is for C:
- and then there are 2 identical for D: .
Should'nt there normally be 2 entrys per volume, one where CurrentSession
is true and one where its false, meaning its the setting applied after reboot?
If I try to execute Protect
on the ManagementObject with DriveLetter=C:
I get an Access denied
exception, I assume because its the object for the current session.
Also if I try uwfmgr.exe Volume Protect C:
on the console it simply hangs: no reaction, no error, only a forever blinking cursor. EDIT: it turned out this was a problem caused by another installed software. See also below.
Do I have to enable or disable or do anything else before I can protect volumes?
Thanks in advance,
Sebastian
My system:
- Windows 10 IOT Enterprise 2016 LTSB x64
- 1 SSD 250GB with Boot, C: and D:
Edit:
Here I asked a follow up question with some other details and a workaround. If I use uwfmgr.exe volume protect c:
for example, it works and UWF_Volume now suddenly has (the correct) 2 entries for C:
, one for the current and one for the next session.
However I want to avoid this, because IMHO it should be solveable by WMI only.
Edit 2: @sommmen
The partition layout is as following: One disk with 4 partitions.
- Boot, 500MB
- C:/ , 45GB
- unknown, 500MB (Boot-Backup I think)
- D:/ , ~200GB
PS:
Please could anyone create the tags uwf
and uwfmgr
? Would be nice :-)