Kirmmela
New Member
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- Apr 17, 2015
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- #1
Just to be clear, it's not one of those usual things. I got Win 7 Home Premium.
CMD, Task Manager, all exe files and GPEdit works fine. Everything works fine actually - exept regedit just does not respond.
I have Nod32 and my PC is virus / malware free.
All I want is just access to registry editor.
Things I've tried already:
1. Tried just running as administrator (ofcourse)
2. Did sfc /scannow
3. A couple of different scripts to enable / disable regedit manually including the Symantec's script.
4. Changing Group Policy Settings (gpedit.msc of preventing access to registry editing tools)
5. CMD command "HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System" /t Reg_dword /v DisableRegistryTools /f /d 0 (ran as admin ofcourse)
No luck yet. Anyone have any ideas? Regedit just won't react. No errors, no pop ups, nothing. Silence.
CMD, Task Manager, all exe files and GPEdit works fine. Everything works fine actually - exept regedit just does not respond.
I have Nod32 and my PC is virus / malware free.
All I want is just access to registry editor.
Things I've tried already:
1. Tried just running as administrator (ofcourse)
2. Did sfc /scannow
3. A couple of different scripts to enable / disable regedit manually including the Symantec's script.
4. Changing Group Policy Settings (gpedit.msc of preventing access to registry editing tools)
5. CMD command "HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Policies\System" /t Reg_dword /v DisableRegistryTools /f /d 0 (ran as admin ofcourse)
No luck yet. Anyone have any ideas? Regedit just won't react. No errors, no pop ups, nothing. Silence.
Solution
Might be time to consider an in-place upgrade / repair as described here.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2255099
It's a pain, no doubt but a possible last resort if everything else that you've tried has failed.
It's generally non-destructive, so your programs, drivers and such should remain without issues, but....
I would perform a system image before proceeding.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2255099
It's a pain, no doubt but a possible last resort if everything else that you've tried has failed.
It's generally non-destructive, so your programs, drivers and such should remain without issues, but....
I would perform a system image before proceeding.
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2009
- Messages
- 13,722
Might be time to consider an in-place upgrade / repair as described here.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2255099
It's a pain, no doubt but a possible last resort if everything else that you've tried has failed.
It's generally non-destructive, so your programs, drivers and such should remain without issues, but....
I would perform a system image before proceeding.
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/2255099
It's a pain, no doubt but a possible last resort if everything else that you've tried has failed.
It's generally non-destructive, so your programs, drivers and such should remain without issues, but....
I would perform a system image before proceeding.
Last edited:
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2009
- Messages
- 13,722
Yep.... I believe I might have actually said as much.Oh my, this sounds like a last resort indeed
Make a copy of regedit, then rename it to CopyReg (just so there is something prefixing the "reg" part.
See if that runs.
If it does, then....
you may not be as virus free as you might have hoped.