- Joined
- May 25, 2009
- Messages
- 6,638
- Thread Author
- #1
Hi Guys.
I haven't had a Windows XP question in a lot of years.
My friend Paul asked my to come over and upgrade his Dell computer to 2 Gigs of ram.
I did that and it booted and worked fine, but I noticed that only half of his hard drive was available.
I said where is the rest of your hard drive, it shows under 60 Gigs and Belarc says it's a 120 Gig drive. He's been complaining about not having enough space.
He also has Ubuntu installed in a dual boot setup but seldom uses it.
I went to Disk Management and found that he had three partitions one small one of about 6 gigs.
The other 2 each took roughly half of his hard drive.
One was the Windows drive and the other was identified as Unrecognized.
I figured the small one was Ubuntu and the other one was, who know what but not usable.
He agreed so I created a new partition on it and closed disk manager.
Everything worked great the drives were visible and functional.
Later we rebooted while updating his graphics drivers and a screen came up saying Grub Error.
I looked it up on his IPad and found this happens when you delete Linux without modifying the boot file first.
Apparently another friend of his who had installed Ubuntu had partitioned the hard drive in half and put Ubuntu on it making it unusable in Windows.
I got the same error when I tried to run repair but it allowed me to install XP on the now empty H:\ drive, so I wouldn't overwrite his data.
As soon as I did this it booted with an option to boot into either version of XP.
This was great, it recovered his original install and all his data intact.
So I finally get to my question, I found out you can't use EasyBCD in Windows XP and he want's to get rid of the new install, and forget about Linux.
I found the boot.ini file on the correct drive with his old Windows installation.
Here it is.....
[boot loader]
timeout=30
default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINDOWS
[operating systems]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /fastdetect
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
I'm guessing that if make sure which one of these is the one that starts the new installation and delete it, I'll be all set and can delete the new install.
But I thought I'd ask here first, just to make sure that I'm right?
So if I just remove the entry...
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
I'll look in Disk Management to make sure which one is really partition (1) and which is partition (2) the disks have names so I can tell which is the old install.
It will boot directly into his original installation, right?
Thanks for the help...
Mike
I haven't had a Windows XP question in a lot of years.
My friend Paul asked my to come over and upgrade his Dell computer to 2 Gigs of ram.
I did that and it booted and worked fine, but I noticed that only half of his hard drive was available.
I said where is the rest of your hard drive, it shows under 60 Gigs and Belarc says it's a 120 Gig drive. He's been complaining about not having enough space.
He also has Ubuntu installed in a dual boot setup but seldom uses it.
I went to Disk Management and found that he had three partitions one small one of about 6 gigs.
The other 2 each took roughly half of his hard drive.
One was the Windows drive and the other was identified as Unrecognized.
I figured the small one was Ubuntu and the other one was, who know what but not usable.
He agreed so I created a new partition on it and closed disk manager.
Everything worked great the drives were visible and functional.
Later we rebooted while updating his graphics drivers and a screen came up saying Grub Error.
I looked it up on his IPad and found this happens when you delete Linux without modifying the boot file first.
Apparently another friend of his who had installed Ubuntu had partitioned the hard drive in half and put Ubuntu on it making it unusable in Windows.
I got the same error when I tried to run repair but it allowed me to install XP on the now empty H:\ drive, so I wouldn't overwrite his data.
As soon as I did this it booted with an option to boot into either version of XP.
This was great, it recovered his original install and all his data intact.
So I finally get to my question, I found out you can't use EasyBCD in Windows XP and he want's to get rid of the new install, and forget about Linux.
I found the boot.ini file on the correct drive with his old Windows installation.
Here it is.....
[boot loader]
timeout=30
default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINDOWS
[operating systems]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /fastdetect
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
I'm guessing that if make sure which one of these is the one that starts the new installation and delete it, I'll be all set and can delete the new install.
But I thought I'd ask here first, just to make sure that I'm right?
So if I just remove the entry...
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
I'll look in Disk Management to make sure which one is really partition (1) and which is partition (2) the disks have names so I can tell which is the old install.
It will boot directly into his original installation, right?
Thanks for the help...
Mike