Pascal,
Have a root registry key selected in regedit. E.g., select HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE node, the got o the File menu and select "Load Hive"
item.
Also you can use "reg.exe /LOAD" command.
=========
Regards,
KM
> This is exactly what i was looking for; however, my "Load Hives" is disabled; how can i make it available ?
>
> "steves" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> If you can manually run regedit.exe you can 'load a hive' file to
>> access the second disk. This works basically as follows:
>>
>> 1) Open Regedit
>> 2) Select a top level key
>> 3) Select file, load hive,
>> 4) Browse to locate the hive of interest
>> Default locations C:\Windows\System32\config
>> file 'System' = HKLM\System
>> file 'Software = HKLM\Software
>> Default user file is located at (by default)
>> c:\Documents and Settings\default user\ntuser.dat
>> 5) Give the hive a name (e.g XPE_System)
>>
>> Now you can make your changes. Be sure to select the loaded branch and
>> then use the 'Unload hive' command to close it.
>>
>> That's the manual way, good for experimenting before automating. I
>> would bet that there is an automated way available, but I don't know
>> what it is. Maybe REG.EXE could automate this.
>>
>> I have also seen threads about changing the user name in this
>> newsgroup. (Search this newsgroup for 'Computer Name' + registry).
>>
>> A Previous post from Andy Allred[MS] included:
>>>>
>>>> You could use a script to alter the ComputerName & Hostname keys such as
>>>>HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\ComputerName
>>>>&
>>>>HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\Tcpip\Parameters
>>>>before sealing it.
>>>>
>>>>Note sure if that's it, though. I do know that if it's on the domain there will be other
>>>>keys.
>>>>
>>>>Andy
>>
>
>
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