Before you go to shut down, do you close Everything first, or do you simply tell the computer to shut down & expect it to close any programs that you might have open?
(I wouldn't think it to be normal, particularly, but I don't shut down, only sleep.)
In my case, the file “Everything.db” is about 1.5 GB in size mainly because of the indexing of file contents.
I have also received this message (Saving Everything database to disk) before.
When 'Everything' is closed, this file is saved, and when the PC is shut down,
'Everything' saves, among other things, the “Everything.db” file, and this takes some time.
If you want to avoid this message, you can close 'Everything' completely (menu “File” > Exit) shortly before shutting down the PC.
Before you go to shut down, do you close Everything first, or do you simply tell the computer to shut down & expect it to close any programs that you might have open?
I have around 500,000 files in my database. And no, I just shut down the computer without closing Everything first.
In my case, the file “Everything.db” is about 1.5 GB in size mainly because of the indexing of file contents.
I have also received this message (Saving Everything database to disk) before.
When 'Everything' is closed, this file is saved, and when the PC is shut down,
'Everything' saves, among other things, the “Everything.db” file, and this takes some time.
If you want to avoid this message, you can close 'Everything' completely (menu “File” > Exit) shortly before shutting down the PC.
Michael_88 wrote: Wed Feb 26, 2025 3:51 pm
Is this normal? Is there a setting I might have missed that's causing this to happen every time?
Yes, that is quite normal. Everything needs time to write its database to disk.
To see how many data Everything needs to write to disk, type or paste the following search in Everything's search bar and check the Size column:
It is possible to reconfigure Windows to give applications less or more time before "complaining", but that is not neededd in this case, as it does not give any issues.