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I had this on my Win 7 x64 machine. Just found a solution/workaround.
This machine had a single partition/logical drive C: and so was the swap location. The problem was circumvented by running in Admin mode but this causes other issues with registry and the IT team if you have to listen to one.
I stopped the error.
But all I did was shrink my main partition and add a small partition so I have two local physical drives.
Now understand I did NOT tell PS to use that drive for anything. But it does create a temp file on the new logical drive call "300017921_MVM_0.tmp" when I do a distort lens correction.
Very interesting. It NEEDS a second drive, and uses it without being told.
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This problem is often associated wtih running in WIndows 7 or Windows Vista with a single drive partition. The reason is that Photoshop sometimes (e.g., with some filters) wants to create a scratch file. It tries to do this in the root directory (e.g., C:\ ). Vista and Windows 7 do not allow creating scratch files in the root directory by default.
I know of three workarounds none of which would be necessary if Photoshop would just use the temp directory as well-behaved programs are supposed to. I'd love to hear of a way to configure where Photoshop puts its scratch files so these workarounds aren't necessary. The workarounds are:
1. Instead of double-clicking on Photoshop, right-click and select "Run as administrator." Of course, I always forget to do this until I hit the problem. There is a small security risk if there is a bug in Photoshop or a bad 3rd-party add-on.
2. Change the permissions on the root directory of your drive to allow anyone to create and modify files there. This is a potential security risk as it makes it possible for malware to change your system files.
3. Create another partition. Apparently Photoshop will try other hard drives after failing on the first one. Vista and Windows 7 do not protect the root directories of other hard drives.
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Thanks Ron.
You can modify the shortcut to always run as Administrator. It is under the compatibility tab on the shortcut properties.
It still prompts you for confirmation but you wont forget.
But this is a dangerous way to do and I am happy with the other partiition.
Of course Everyone will tell you you should have a scratch disk anyway. I do have a RAM Card drive for scratch on my main work PC.
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Thanks, Sean.
I do know about changing the shortcut, but I agree that it is dangerous.
Right now, I only run into the problem once in a while. If I start to use
those features all the time, I'll create a separate partition.
I just wish Adobe would use the Temp directory like they are supposed to.
Ron
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I just wish Adobe would use the Temp directory like they are supposed to.
We should be, but a bug crept in, and wasn't noticed (due to permissions, running as admin, etc.).
We're looking into it.
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Thanks so much. That's wonderful.
I really appreciate the response.
The problem is easy enough to deal with now that I know what to do. I'll just hope to get a fix in the next version.
Ron Smith
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Still active in CS5. As a workaround on Windows 7, I use:
1. Go to command prompt
2. Type "subst p: c:\temp" Where p is some unused drive letter.
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What always works, is opening PS by right-clicking on the icon and put Run as administrator.