As we all know, the sleep function of the Microsoft operating system will cause the resources to occupy, Windows Vista as a member of Microsoft's operating system naturally also can not avoid. Oddly enough, even if sleep is banned, there is still a sleep-related file in the Vista installation directory: Hiberfil.sys.
Figure 1 Hiberfil.sys files that cannot be deleted
Later, after my repeatedly attempt, I finally figured out the ultimate way to get rid of this "stubborn molecule" completely.
First, users log into Vista and then access the Control Panel, which disables Vista sleep in the Power management option (Figure 2).
Figure 2 Stop Sleep
After you complete the steps to prevent sleep, or disk Cleanup on the e disk under Vista system (Note: Do not use XP system login to clean up). Cleaning up the disk is not to say to clean up the temporary files, but to do the following:
Right-click the e disk letter, select Properties, click the "Disk Cleanup" button in the pop-up window (Figure 3), and then the system will begin scanning the system (Figure 4).
Figure 3 Preparing for Disk Cleanup
Figure 4 The system scans for files that can be deleted
After the scan is complete, the Disk Cleanup dialog box will pop up
Figure 5 Disk Cleanup
Pull down the right slider in the upper window, locate and select the Hibernate file cleaner, and then click OK to completely clean up the space occupied by the hibernation file.