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SharePoint 2010– Storman on Steroids

AKA… how to visualize the files you are storing in SharePoint.

*Update on the below after having spoken with the team that runs the internal Microsoft SharePoint farm (thanks Sam for information on the impact!). While everything mentioned does work, the approach has two downsides:

  1. It will not be entirely accurate… while it will display everything you can see as a user, it will not show everything that counts against your quota (including versions and recycle bin). It may be better than nothing, but more importantly…
  2. Mapping the drive with WebDAV (and then enumerating the contents of a site collection) causes some tremendously expensive operations to take place on the server side. This will pound the Web Front End servers, which can impact access times for everyone accessing the farm. You don’t want to be “that guy”.

The two quick and easy approaches to reducing the space used by your SharePoint site are:

  • Empty your recycle bin. This will free up space from your quota, and move deleted items into the second-level recycle bin (where they can still be recovered by site collection administrators if necessary)
  • Ensure that if lists/libraries are using versioning, that it has a realistic number of versions (as SharePoint stores a complete copy of documents for every version you have). If you have a frequently updated file with unlimited versions, you may be shocked at the amount of space it is taking up against your quota.

As my Dad used to say… TANSTAAFL: There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch. If it was as easy to visualize storage as I show below in a supported and resource-kind manner, the SharePoint team would have already added it.

In SharePoint 2007, there was a useful tool underneath Site Collection Administration called “Storage space allocation” that led to storman.aspx underneath https://servername/_layouts/storman.aspx.

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This storman tool allowed you to view how your space was being used within your site collection, and if you were filling up your site against your storage quota, you could show documents, document libraries, lists, and recycle bins, sorted by size or date.  This was a great way to find large or old documents to delete and free up space.

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On the back end, this was a resource intensive tool that could cause database blocking, and as such it did not make the cut for SharePoint 2010. 

KB 982587 discusses some possible workarounds for the problem: The Storman.aspx page is removed from SharePoint Server 2010

The Storman.aspx page is used for storage management. For example, the page can show you the top 100 documents or document libraries in terms of size. Therefore, you can use the page to clean up some content from your site by deleting the large content that you no longer need. Because there is no replacement for this page, use one of the following methods to regain certain functionalities:

Those solutions all work, although manually poking through document libraries in Explorer View is not my idea of a good time.  As there really are no new problems… let’s see if we can use my favorite tool for visualizing why my hard drive is full, and apply it to finding out what is filling up a SharePoint site collection.

Windows allows you to map network drives via WebDAV.  SharePoint allows you to access site collections via WebDAV.  To combine the two, put the URL to your site collection in the Folder field of Windows’ Folder field, and you will end up with a drive letter mapped to your SharePoint site collection.

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Download and install WinDirStat from https://windirstat.info/ (not a Microsoft product, so if it eats all the cookies in your house or forgets to rewind your VHS tapes… sorry about that).  Select that network drive you just mapped, and hit OK.

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WinDirStat will scan away for a few minutes, and come back with the view below.  At a glance, I can quickly see that the majority of my files are stored in a particular site (the “offerings” and “delivery” subsites use up 84% of my space), and PowerPoint/Zip/WMV files are taking up the vast majority of space. 

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From here, you can drill down into the tree, select all files of a particular type, or just right click on some of the largest boxes and choose “Explorer Here”, which will open up a window in Windows that is opened to the document library or folder in SharePoint that holds that particular file. 

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You can then decide what to delete/archive/move to free up space.  How’s that for an awesome way to visualize the files you are storing in SharePoint?

(P.S.  This works fine in SharePoint 2007 too… I never thought to do it back in the day as I had storman available to show me my big/old files)

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    Hello Tunde- Good to hear!  The two best places to start are with the TechNet Virtual Labs for SharePoint (technet.microsoft.com/.../bb512933.aspx) and with the SharePoint 2010 documentation (technet.microsoft.com/.../ee263917.aspx)

  • Anonymous
    September 28, 2010
    Hi, quite an enlightening article.i'm  an MCITP server2008, just graduated from college. i'm located  in Nigeria.i host a blog at tundeabagun.blogspot.com and i want to learn sharepoint.i intend to study on my own. please could you help me with any materials, e-books,videos(FREE) even on sharepoint 2006, i could learn and practice with . Thanking you in anticipation of a positive response.

  • Anonymous
    September 29, 2010
    For an alternative to windirstat - try Directory Report <a href="http://www.file-utilities.com">http://www.file-utilities.com</a> It shows you the size of each folder without all the eye candy

  • Anonymous
    October 11, 2010
    Thanks for your suggestion Sean.getting right on it.will get back to you as to my progress.Thanks again

  • Anonymous
    March 24, 2011
    Isn't this proposed solution ignoring the warning about enumerating the contents of a site collection via WebDAV? Doing this on a large site collection on a shared farm would "pound the Web Front End servers". He even says "You don’t want to be 'that guy'". Seems like this article is advocating "being 'that guy':. I would warn any users to not take this approach unless it's their own environment and they don't care about impacting the system for other users. In our environment, we would have to hunt these people down and make them wish they'd never read this article.

  • Anonymous
    March 24, 2011
    Unlimited versions can be a serious issue. If your users use versioning, educate them to put in limits on how many versions to retain. I've twice had to deal with issues where a document was being updated continuously by a process via the web services and consuming extreme amounts of space.  In both cases, the document and/or list item had thousands of versions, each slightly bigger than the previous.   The one with 4,000 versions was consuming a mere 6GB of space. The one with 55,000 versions was consuming 97GB, well beyond the 8GB quota.