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A friend has a PC with two copies of Win XP installed - there's what I'm
told is a 'broken'/'corrupted'/infected - no one seems sure - copy of XP Home in C:\WINDOWS\, and a working XP Pro in C:\WINDOW2\. C:\boot.ini mentions both; the latter is the default. This is a machine where no-one has kept a record of what software has been installed when, nor how anything has been configured. I'm trying to bring order to chaos. I'm considering renaming C:\WINDOWS to something like C:\WINDOWS-to-be-deleted-soon so that if the machine still runs ok that set of files can be got rid of in due course. If I do this do I need at this stage to remove the line in boot.ini that refers to that version of Windows? Also, how sure can I be that Windows itself is careful enough only to load files from / update files in %systemroot% rather than "C:\WINDOWS\" explicitly? I suppose that apps-wise I can't be sure that none references C:\WINDOWS directly either, but at least with apps I should be able to uninstall/ reinstall/ reset/ reconfigure things as needed... Also, if the rename (and/or eventual deletion of C:\WINDOWS) works, would it later be safe to rename C:\WINDOW2 to C:\WINDOWS ? I presume that would only be possible in safe mode or with a linux live CD? Clearly boot.ini would need to be updated at the same time - or perhaps I could have two lines in boot.ini both with the same parameters apart from the folder name so that one would always match the available folder? All advice gratefully received... -- Jeremy C B Nicoll - my opinions are my own. Email sent to my from-address will be deleted. Instead, please reply to replacing "aaa" by "284". |
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On 11/26/2010 8:46 AM, Jeremy Nicoll - news posts wrote:
A friend has a PC with two copies of Win XP installed - there's what I'm told is a 'broken'/'corrupted'/infected - no one seems sure - copy of XP Home in C:\WINDOWS\, and a working XP Pro in C:\WINDOW2\. C:\boot.ini mentions both; the latter is the default. This is a machine where no-one has kept a record of what software has been installed when, nor how anything has been configured. I'm trying to bring order to chaos. I'm considering renaming C:\WINDOWS to something like C:\WINDOWS-to-be-deleted-soon so that if the machine still runs ok that set of files can be got rid of in due course. If I do this do I need at this stage to remove the line in boot.ini that refers to that version of Windows? Also, how sure can I be that Windows itself is careful enough only to load files from / update files in %systemroot% rather than "C:\WINDOWS\" explicitly? You will find out when you rename the C:\Windows folder. When you boot the machine Windows uses files from the %systemroot% folder, if the variable points to Window2 then that is where Windows will work. I suppose that apps-wise I can't be sure that none references C:\WINDOWS directly either, but at least with apps I should be able to uninstall/ reinstall/ reset/ reconfigure things as needed... Also, if the rename (and/or eventual deletion of C:\WINDOWS) works, would it later be safe to rename C:\WINDOW2 to C:\WINDOWS ? I presume that would only be possible in safe mode or with a linux live CD? Clearly boot.ini would need to be updated at the same time - or perhaps I could have two lines in boot.ini both with the same parameters apart from the folder name so that one would always match the available folder? You won't be able to rename the Window2 folder, at least not without considerable effort of trying to fix every registry entry and every shortcut pointing to the Window2 folder, for all intents and purposes this is not really a viable thing to try. All advice gratefully received... These parallel installations can cause problems with many of the shared folders, they are usually last ditch attempts to try to access the disk to salvage files or to try to fix the original installation. You should really ditch the whole setup, the best way to fix a mess like that is to salvage the user's private files and then format the drive and do a clean installation, in the end this is really the easiest, fastest and most reliable thing to do. John |
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John John - MVP wrote:
On 11/26/2010 8:46 AM, Jeremy Nicoll - news posts wrote: A friend has a PC ... All advice gratefully received... These parallel installations can cause problems with many of the shared folders... John Thanks very much for taking the time to reply to my questions; it's much appreciated. -- Jeremy C B Nicoll - my opinions are my own. Email sent to my from-address will be deleted. Instead, please reply to replacing "aaa" by "284". |
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