This is a discussion on Cloned boot drive boots to windows, then automatically logs me off -- Help! within the Slackware Linux Support forums, part of the Unix Operating Systems category; --> I've got a dual-boot system (Windows 2000 Pro & Slackware). I'm trying to upgrade my main drive in my ...
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| I've got a dual-boot system (Windows 2000 Pro & Slackware). I'm trying to upgrade my main drive in my laptop from a 40GB to 60GB drive. I've tried cloning the old drive using both DriveImage 7 and just using my Linux boot CD to make a 1-to-1 copy (the second, I know, is not a good strategy, given different disk geometries). What happens when Windows boots (and it *does* boot) on the cloned drive is, it gets to the login screen, I log in, and then, after some disk access, it says "Saving settings" and then gives me the login screen again. Anybody seen this behavior? I'm assuming it can't find some important system files, but I don't see why it would boot in the first place if it couldn't find them. My setup is as follows: C: FAT Primary partition with BootMagic on it D: Windows 2000 Pro partition (NTFS) (logical) E: NTFS partition (logical) - Linux boot partition (logical) - Linux Swap partition (logical) - Linux partition (logical) Linux boots without any problems (of course :-) ). Any ideas out there? - Tim P.S. For the cross-posted linux groups, I ask here because many of you use a dual-boot scenario, and may have encountered this before. -- |
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| Try MBRtool and have a reset the diskmanager signature bytes. So far, 8 out of 10 it works. Joep -- D I Y D a t a R e c o v e r y . N L - Data & Disaster Recovery Tools http://www.diydatarecovery.nl http://www.diydatarecovery.com Please include previous correspondence! DiskPatch - MBR, Partition, boot sector repair and recovery. iRecover - FAT, FAT32 and NTFS data recovery. MBRtool - Freeware MBR backup and restore. "Spammay Blockay" <SPAMBLOCKER@BLOCKEDTOAVOIDSPAM.com> wrote in message news:bnbot2$v19$1@bolt.sonic.net... > I've got a dual-boot system (Windows 2000 Pro & Slackware). > > I'm trying to upgrade my main drive in my laptop from a 40GB to 60GB drive. > I've tried cloning the old drive using both DriveImage 7 and just using > my Linux boot CD to make a 1-to-1 copy (the second, I know, is not a good > strategy, given different disk geometries). > > What happens when Windows boots (and it *does* boot) on the cloned drive is, > it gets to the login screen, I log in, and then, after some disk access, > it says "Saving settings" and then gives me the login screen again. > > Anybody seen this behavior? I'm assuming it can't find some important > system files, but I don't see why it would boot in the first place if > it couldn't find them. > > My setup is as follows: > > C: FAT Primary partition with BootMagic on it > D: Windows 2000 Pro partition (NTFS) (logical) > E: NTFS partition (logical) > - Linux boot partition (logical) > - Linux Swap partition (logical) > - Linux partition (logical) > > Linux boots without any problems (of course :-) ). > > Any ideas out there? > > - Tim > > P.S. For the cross-posted linux groups, I ask here because many of you use > a dual-boot scenario, and may have encountered this before. > > -- > |
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| It sounds to me like Windows cannot locate any swapfile at all. You may be able to boot the machine up to the login prompt and then use another machine to attach to the registry remotely and modify the following key HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Contro l\Session Manager\Memory Management You want to change the PagingFiles value to reflect a currently-available location and size. Also, this value is of type RegMultiSZ, so you will need to use regedt32.exe to modify it (unless you use Windows XP, where RegEdit contains this functionality). Regards Oli "Spammay Blockay" <SPAMBLOCKER@BLOCKEDTOAVOIDSPAM.com> wrote in message news:bnbot2$v19$1@bolt.sonic.net... > I've got a dual-boot system (Windows 2000 Pro & Slackware). > > I'm trying to upgrade my main drive in my laptop from a 40GB to 60GB drive. > I've tried cloning the old drive using both DriveImage 7 and just using > my Linux boot CD to make a 1-to-1 copy (the second, I know, is not a good > strategy, given different disk geometries). > > What happens when Windows boots (and it *does* boot) on the cloned drive is, > it gets to the login screen, I log in, and then, after some disk access, > it says "Saving settings" and then gives me the login screen again. > > Anybody seen this behavior? I'm assuming it can't find some important > system files, but I don't see why it would boot in the first place if > it couldn't find them. > > My setup is as follows: > > C: FAT Primary partition with BootMagic on it > D: Windows 2000 Pro partition (NTFS) (logical) > E: NTFS partition (logical) > - Linux boot partition (logical) > - Linux Swap partition (logical) > - Linux partition (logical) > > Linux boots without any problems (of course :-) ). > > Any ideas out there? > > - Tim > > P.S. For the cross-posted linux groups, I ask here because many of you use > a dual-boot scenario, and may have encountered this before. > > -- > |
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| In article <eP$nR0lmDHA.2964@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl>, Oli Restorick [MVP] <oli@mvps.org> wrote: >It sounds to me like Windows cannot locate any swapfile at all. I forgot to mention -- when I cloned the drive using DriveImage 7, I had this behavior, but no error messages. However, when I did a straight disk copy from my Linux boot CD, I got a message about the paging file being not large enough, and instructions on how to modify it. All the same, it started to log me in, then logged me out. Is the paging file known to Windows by a block offset rather than a filename (even though it appears as a regular file in NTFS)? >You may be able to boot the machine up to the login prompt and then use >another machine to attach to the registry remotely and modify the following >key > >HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Contr ol\Session Manager\Memory >Management > >You want to change the PagingFiles value to reflect a currently-available >location and size. > >Also, this value is of type RegMultiSZ, so you will need to use regedt32.exe >to modify it (unless you use Windows XP, where RegEdit contains this >functionality). I wonder why, if I did a straight copy, it wouldn't work... perhaps drive-letter assignment isn't happening as expected? I'll research paging file setup on Win2K, anyway. Thanks! - Tim -- |
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| In comp.os.linux.misc Spammay Blockay <SPAMBLOCKER@blockedtoavoidspam.com> wrote: > Anybody seen this behavior? Yes, I saw it many times with other cloning tools. Solution: slap a Windows CD in and reinstall Windows. Or just throw the bloody Wincrap away. Davide |
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| In article <bnbs1e$uq5d0$3@ID-18487.news.uni-berlin.de>, Davide Bianchi <davideyeahsure@onlyforfun.net> wrote: >In comp.os.linux.misc Spammay Blockay <SPAMBLOCKER@blockedtoavoidspam.com> wrote: >> Anybody seen this behavior? > >Yes, I saw it many times with other cloning tools. Solution: slap >a Windows CD in and reinstall Windows. Or just throw the bloody >Wincrap away. Can't do either of those -- too much already on my Windows installation (updates, mods, etc.). And I'm a software developer, and, sorry to say, the Windows-based tools *are* generally better than current Linux and Java-based tools. I've used 'em both. I *do* have Cygwin, tho'. :-) - Tim -- |
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| Spammay Blockay wrote: >>Yes, I saw it many times with other cloning tools. Solution: slap >>a Windows CD in and reinstall Windows. Or just throw the bloody >>Wincrap away. > > Can't do either of those -- too much already on my Windows installation > (updates, mods, etc.).**And*I'm*a*software*developer,*and,*sorry*t o*say, > the Windows-based tools are generally better than current Linux and > Java-based tools.**I've*used*'em*both.**I*do*have*Cygwin,*tho '.*:-) .... if you're a *developer*, then the ONLY REAL solution is to run winders under VMWare with Linux as the host. no more duel-booting. install winOS, then all your tools, all the patches, then, save off the image file someplace. when winOS cr@ps out, copy over the saved-off image and voila', you're back in business. plus you have the added advantage of adding other OSes too, such as other Linuxes. BTW, dont x-post to more than a couple of newsgroups .. -- /// Michael J. Tobler: motorcyclist, surfer, skydiver, \\\ \\\ and author: "Inside Linux", "C++ HowTo", "C++ Unleashed" /// ADA, n.: Something you need only know the name of to be an Expert in Computing. Useful in sentences like, "We had better develop an ADA awareness." |
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| "Spammay Blockay" <SPAMBLOCKER@BLOCKEDTOAVOIDSPAM.com> wrote in message news:bnbto7$5se$1@bolt.sonic.net... > In article <bnbs1e$uq5d0$3@ID-18487.news.uni-berlin.de>, > Davide Bianchi <davideyeahsure@onlyforfun.net> wrote: > >In comp.os.linux.misc Spammay Blockay <SPAMBLOCKER@blockedtoavoidspam.com> wrote: > >> Anybody seen this behavior? > > > >Yes, I saw it many times with other cloning tools. Solution: slap > >a Windows CD in and reinstall Windows. Or just throw the bloody > >Wincrap away. > > Can't do either of those -- too much already on my Windows installation > (updates, mods, etc.). And I'm a software developer, and, sorry to say, > the Windows-based tools *are* generally better than current Linux and > Java-based tools. I've used 'em both. I *do* have Cygwin, tho'. :-) *WRONG* newsgroups for this, guys. Pick a group to followup to, and please get it off the Linux newsgroups, although some of your most knowledgable people will be there. I'd recommend taking the Windows installation CD and doing an "Upgrade" with it. In many cases of corrupted messes, this will reset enough of the core OS but leave many if not all of the software and settings installed after the fact unbroken. And definitely take the disk out and do a *REAL* backup of the core data to another machine or a tape drive or CD, first. |
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| On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 17:52:34 GMT, Spammay Blockay <SPAMBLOCKER@BLOCKEDTOAVOIDSPAM.com> wrote: > I've got a dual-boot system (Windows 2000 Pro & Slackware). > > I'm trying to upgrade my main drive in my laptop from a 40GB to 60GB drive. > I've tried cloning the old drive using both DriveImage 7 and just using > my Linux boot CD to make a 1-to-1 copy (the second, I know, is not a good > strategy, given different disk geometries). > > What happens when Windows boots (and it *does* boot) on the cloned drive is, > it gets to the login screen, I log in, and then, after some disk access, > it says "Saving settings" and then gives me the login screen again. > > Anybody seen this behavior? I'm assuming it can't find some important > system files, but I don't see why it would boot in the first place if > it couldn't find them. It depends on how files are accessed, relative paths should work, but once you stumble on a file addressed by a full path (with drive letter) you're sunk. > P.S. For the cross-posted linux groups, I ask here because many of you use > a dual-boot scenario, and may have encountered this before. > I've seen it. AFTER YOU CLONE THE DISK, YOU NEED TO SHUT DOWN AND REMOVE THE CLONE. If you boot windows without doing so it will change the drive letters on the second disk. You need to do a secondary install, boot from it and change the affected partitions to their previous drive letters. One of many problems with drive letters. (Interestingly, if you have telnet enabled on W2K, you can log in, which is how I found the problem. The solution was found on the MS Knowledge Base.) Michael C. -- mcsuper5@usol.com http://mcsuper5.freeshell.org/ Registered Linux User #303915 http://counter.li.org/ |