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Why does it appear that most of the free space in my drive is used when BitLocker is converting the drive?

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Why does it appear that most of the free space in my drive is used when BitLocker is converting the drive?

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BitLocker cannot ignore free space when the drive is being encrypted because unallocated disk space commonly contains data remnants. However, it is not efficient to encrypt free space on a drive. To solve this problem, BitLocker first creates a large placeholder file that takes most of the available disk space and then writes cryptographic material to disk sectors that belong to the placeholder file. During this process, BitLocker leaves 6 GB of available space for short-term system needs. All other space, including the 6 GB of free space not occupied by the placeholder file, is encrypted. When encryption of the drive is paused or completed, the placeholder file is deleted and the amount of available free space reverts to normal. A placeholder file is used only on drives formatted by using the NTFS or exFAT file system. If you want to reclaim this free space before encryption of the drive has completed, you can use the Manage-bde command-line tool to pause encryption.

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