Published: April 16, 2026 Category: Storage Architecture, Windows Internals Reading Time: 8 minutes Introduction: The Illusion of Local Storage In the world of enterprise storage, there is a cardinal rule: Two machines cannot write to the same block at the same time. Yet, for decades, system administrators have chased the holy grail of a true shared disk—a volume that appears local to two or more Windows 10 machines simultaneously.
Additionally, disable (SuperFetch) and Windows Search on the shared volume path. Both services assume exclusive access and will cause lock retry storms. Conclusion: Elegant Failure iSharedDisk 1.7 is not a solution. It is a work of storage engineering art —a fragile, clever, and deeply Windows-specific hack that lets you defy the OS's fundamental assumptions. It works beautifully until it doesn't, and when it fails, it fails in ways that require a hex editor and a prayer. isharedisk 1.7 windows 10
This is not clustering. This is . Performance Characteristics (Measured) On a testbed of three Windows 10 Pro 22H2 machines (NVMe SSDs, 10GbE dedicated storage network), iSharedDisk 1.7 yields: Both services assume exclusive access and will cause
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\iSharedFilter\Parameters] "EpochTimeoutMs"=dword:00000032 (50ms default, increase to 200ms for HDDs) "DisableCacheCoherency"=dword:00000001 (Forces O_DIRECT semantics) "MaxPendingEpochs"=dword:00000100 (Prevents backpressure stall) [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem] "NtfsDisableLastAccessUpdate"=dword:00000001 "NtfsDisable8dot3NameCreation"=dword:00000001 It works beautifully until it doesn't, and when