Using knoppix to fix windows xp




















The safest and easiest solution is to copy the files to an external drive. For each partition Knoppix finds, an icon will appear on the desktop. Double-click that icon to open the file manager to poke around the partition. He removes the infected drive from the machine, mounts the infected onto his Bart PE machine, and digs into the drive to remove suspect files.

You can do the same thing with Knoppix. If you want to dig around the Windows registry, you need to load another tool called chntpw , which can edit the Windows registry and reset the password of any valid Windows user.

The nice thing about Knoppix is that you are mostly doing this using graphical tools, so the job is incredibly easy. Partitions can also be resized using Knoppix, though this should only be handled by those who know what they are doing. Editor's Picks. The best programming languages to learn in Check for Log4j vulnerabilities with this simple-to-use script.

TasksBoard is the kanban interface for Google Tasks you've been waiting for. This is a chapter from the ExtremeTech book Hacking Knoppix. You or someone you know will encounter a seemingly unfixable problem with a Microsoft Windows operating system environment at one time or another. When this occurred in the past, most users would reinstall their operating systems, sometimes wiping out significant amounts of data that was needed on the system.

Now you can use Knoppix to often correct your Windows system problems without losing any data and save the time associated with reinstalling all of the operating system files and applications.

Resizing Windows Partitions Partitioning is a simple scheme for segmenting your physical hard drive into different sections. Power Windows users typically partition their hard drive for performance and backup reasons or to allow for different operating systems to be installed on it. I'm stressing a lot over this as I have so much that i don't want to lose off the drive and am in a time crunch, I talked about this in another thread as well, so don't want to be repetitious, but no matter what I tried, it wouldn't work.

I set the bios to boot with the CD first, but it just ignored that and the same screens came up as before, showing "unmountable boot volume" in the blue screen which was the same error message. I discussed this on a forum at CNET and someone there said that some systems can't read from recordable discs Really discouraged about this, as I now have no other choice but to pull the drive, buy a new drive and transfer the data from one to the other which I was hoping to avoid.

I wiped a few smudges off the disk, nothing big, so i doubt that's it. It's as if my system simply doesn't recognize the CD. I set the bios to boot from CD, and I can hear the CD starting to run but it never launches the program If my cd drive was bad, it wouldn't have loaded the image file on that or recognized it, but it did.

So, I really don't think it's a malfunction of my cd. I think there's some problem with the disc itself. Unfortunately, I'm not able to burn a CD myself, since I don't have a second computer available and I don't want to use a friend's system,as they've had people mess up their settings before and just don't want anyone else using their stuff, which I respect. If there's anything else I can do to make the Knoppix disc work before I pull my drive, etc.

Thank you so much! Well, perhaps it might be best to start with simply inserting without booting the Knoppix disk in a working system - it might not be readable at all, or it might be fine in another drive. I assume you're unable to try the hint I gave before, regarding using an external CD drive, as well as booting on another system.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000