Quickly create large file on a Windows system

In the same vein as Quickly create a large file on a Linux system, I'd like to quickly create a large file on a Windows system. By large I'm thinking 5 GB. The content doesn't matter. A built-in command or short batch file would be preferable, but I'll accept an application if there are no other easy ways.


fsutil file createnew <filename> <length>

where <length> is in bytes.

For example, to create a 1MB (Windows MB or MiB) file named 'test', this code can be used.

fsutil file createnew test 1048576

fsutil requires administrative privileges though.


You can use the Sysinternals Contig tool. It has a -n switch which creates a new file of a given size. Unlike fsutil, it doesn't require administrative privileges.


I was searching for a way to generate large files with data, not just sparse file. Came across the below technique:

If you want to create a file with real data then you can use the below command line script.

echo "This is just a sample line appended to create a big file.. " > dummy.txt
for /L %i in (1,1,14) do type dummy.txt >> dummy.txt

(Run the above two commands one after another or you can add them to a batch file.)

The above commands create a 1 MB file dummy.txt within few seconds...


Check out RDFC http://www.bertel.de/software/rdfc/index-en.html

RDFC is probably not the fastest, but it does allocate data blocks. The absolutely fastest would have to use lower level API to just obtain cluster chains and put them into MFT without writing data.

Beware that there's no silver bullet here - if "creation" returns instantly that means you got a sparse file which just fakes a large file, but you won't get data blocks/chains till you write into it. If you just read is you'd get very fast zeros which could make you believe that your drive all of the sudden got blazingly fast :-)


Check the Windows Server 2003 Resource Kit Tools. There is a utility called Creatfil.

 CREATFIL.EXE
 -? : This message
 -FileName -- name of the new file
 -FileSize -- size of file in KBytes, default is 1024 KBytes

It is the similar to mkfile on Solaris.