Problem with lkbdhlpr files

T

Teriel9

In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried vaious options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is .vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9
 
M

Michael

Teriel9 said:
In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried vaious options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is
.vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9

A google search turned this up.
1) Go into your system BIOS setup.
2) Goto Integrated Peripherals.
3) Change Port 64/60 Emulation to 'Disable'.
Save and reboot.
 
T

Teriel9

Thanks Micheal,
Tried this but do not have Port60/40 emulation in my Integrated peripherals.
at least I could not find it
Thanks
Teriel9
 
T

Teriel9

Thanks Teneo,
Tried this as I also found it on google, but it did not work for me
Thanks for your interest
Teriel9
 
E

Elmo

Teriel9 said:
In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried various options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is .vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9

If the file can't be loaded, deleting the file won't help; that would
assure it's never loaded. Run regedit, do a search for lkbdhlpr and see
where it's supposed to be located, note the location, press F3 to
continue the search. Place a copy of the file in the needed locations.
 
J

Jose

In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried vaious options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is .vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9

Is this the same problem you had in 2006?

If you are seeing error messages, try to post exactly what they say -
don't try to put it in your own words. Do you really see a message
that says "Cannot remove" or does it really say something else?

Did you decide to edit the registry after reading about some solution
to your issue or is it just a hunch? Do you think it is a good idea
to backup your registry before you start trying things?

Before making any changes to your registry by hand or with third party
tools, be sure to make a backup of the registry first. Here is a link
to a popular registry backup tool:

http://www.larshederer.homepage.t-online.de/erunt/

You have not specified any particulars about your system and your BIOS
information is unknown, but you can provide that and we can help you
look up the documentation instead of just guessing what might be. You
need to also provide the exact message from the Event Log.

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to be private information to you, just
delete from the pasted information.

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc /s

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.
 
T

Teriel9

Yes Micheal Thank you
Teriel9


Michael said:
Have you checked 'services' to see if there's an entry there you can
disable?

--


"Don't pick a fight with an old man.
If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you."
 
T

Teriel9

Hi Elmo,
Thank you but I have tried placing just where registry asks but no joy.
Teriel9
 
T

Teriel9

Thank you Jose,
I have printed your email and will try what you suggest.
regards
Teriel9


In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried vaious options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is
.vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9

Is this the same problem you had in 2006?

If you are seeing error messages, try to post exactly what they say -
don't try to put it in your own words. Do you really see a message
that says "Cannot remove" or does it really say something else?

Did you decide to edit the registry after reading about some solution
to your issue or is it just a hunch? Do you think it is a good idea
to backup your registry before you start trying things?

Before making any changes to your registry by hand or with third party
tools, be sure to make a backup of the registry first. Here is a link
to a popular registry backup tool:

http://www.larshederer.homepage.t-online.de/erunt/

You have not specified any particulars about your system and your BIOS
information is unknown, but you can provide that and we can help you
look up the documentation instead of just guessing what might be. You
need to also provide the exact message from the Event Log.

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to be private information to you, just
delete from the pasted information.

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc /s

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.
 
T

Teriel9

Hi Jose,
Have copied and saved as suggested and attached.
Also attached is an error in the "Application" section re"Server service,
however on checking running services the "Server" service is in fact
running.
Back to lkbdhlpr, The event which shows this error is actually the very 1st
event recorded on each startup, so it is difficult to see how it can be
affected by another event.
Thank you for your tip re registry, I have downloaded and used ERUNT.
Regards
Teriel9


In my Event Viewer an error occurs each time I start up "Cannot load file
"lkbdhlpr"
I have tried vaious options to get rid of it
Removed and Reinstalled Logitech Software
Changed file suffix to .old
Located and tried to delete registry entry for "Legacy lkbdhlpr" given an
error "Cannot remove"
Tried the same thing in safe mode, no change, on reflection, since it is
called for by windows, safe mode would probably still call for it.

I note that there are 2 kinds of lkbdhlpr file one is .sys the other is
.vxd
All files with lkbdhlpr in the name have been deleted.
Can anyone help please
TIA
Teriel9

Is this the same problem you had in 2006?

If you are seeing error messages, try to post exactly what they say -
don't try to put it in your own words. Do you really see a message
that says "Cannot remove" or does it really say something else?

Did you decide to edit the registry after reading about some solution
to your issue or is it just a hunch? Do you think it is a good idea
to backup your registry before you start trying things?

Before making any changes to your registry by hand or with third party
tools, be sure to make a backup of the registry first. Here is a link
to a popular registry backup tool:

http://www.larshederer.homepage.t-online.de/erunt/

You have not specified any particulars about your system and your BIOS
information is unknown, but you can provide that and we can help you
look up the documentation instead of just guessing what might be. You
need to also provide the exact message from the Event Log.

Click Start, Run and in the box enter:

msinfo32

Click OK, and when the System Summary info appears, click Edit, Select
All, Copy and then paste back here.

There will be some personal information (like System Name and User
Name), and whatever appears to be private information to you, just
delete from the pasted information.

Here is a method to post the specific information about individual
events.

To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel,
Administrative Tools, Event Viewer.

A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box
enter:

%SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc /s

Click OK to launch the Event Viewer.

The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System.
Some logs may be almost or completely empty.
Not every event is a problem, some are informational messages that
things are working okay and some are warnings.
No event should defy reasonable explanation.

Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs,
Warnings will have yellow !s.
Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event
means there is a serious issue.
Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. Try to
find just the events at the date
and time around your problem.

If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with
more information. On the right are
black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The
third button that looks like
two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to
your Windows clipboard.

When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of
your issue, click the third button
under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can
paste the details (right click, Paste
or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis.

To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear
the log (backing up the log is offered),
then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the
time of your issue.
 
J

Jose

Have you contacted Logitech about this?  They have forums that are pretty
informative.

You cannot attach or upload things in this forum. Some other forums
you can, but not here.

You can copy/paste information here or you can post screenshots on an
image hosting site and post the link to the image back here. We don't
need screenshots right now, but I will tell you how anyway in case you
need to later.

The msinfo32 and Event Log information is a copy/paste operation. Use
the directions provided before and you need to copy/paste your
information which will look something like this:

System information:

OS Name Microsoft Windows XP Professional
Version 5.1.2600 Service Pack 3 Build 2600
OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation
System Manufacturer Hewlett-Packard
System Model Presario V4000
System Type X86-based PC
Processor x86 Family 6 Model 13 Stepping 8 GenuineIntel ~1696 Mhz
BIOS Version/Date Phoenix F.14, 4/27/2006
SMBIOS Version 2.31
Windows Directory C:\WINDOWS
System Directory C:\WINDOWS\system32
Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1
Locale United States
Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "5.1.2600.5512 (xpsp.
080413-2111)"
Time Zone Eastern Standard Time
Total Physical Memory 512.00 MB
Available Physical Memory 220.24 MB
Total Virtual Memory 2.00 GB
Available Virtual Memory 1.96 GB
Page File Space 1.20 GB
Page File C:\pagefile.sys

Event Log example:

Event Type: Information
Event Source: SecurityCenter
Event Category: None
Event ID: 1800
Date: 3/10/2010
Time: 9:17:05 AM
User: N/A
Description:
The Windows Security Center Service has started.

For more information, see Help and Support Center at
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp.



To create and email/post/print a screenshot:

Press the Print Scrn button to copy your entire screen to the Windows
clipboard.

Press Alt Print Scrn to copy just the active window to the Windows
clipboard.

Open MS Paint:

Start, Program Accessories, Paint

When Paint opens, press CTRL-V to paste the clipboard, save the new
Paint file to your desktop or someplace you can remember. JPG files
take up less hard disk space than BMP files and just as readable.

Make as many screenshots as you need. Practice makes perfect. Be
careful your screenshot does not contain any personal information.
Practice viewing your images before you upload them to be sure they
are okay.

Some sites will let you attach a file directly to your post. If the
site has some kind of attachment/upload function it is usually easiest
just to use it.

If there is no such function in your message board to upload files,
then use a free third party image hosting WWW site.

Create a free account on some free picture hosting web site. You can
always remove your account later if you want. Here are some free
image hosting sites:

http://www.imageshack.us/
http://photobucket.com/

Using your free account, upload your screenshot(s) (the JPG or BMP
files) to the site and it will return to you a URL web address (a
Direct Link) for your new image(s) which you can paste the Direct Link
in a message post, email, etc.

Post that Direct Link web address back here in your response and we
can click on the link address and see your screenshot. Post as many
as you need - the sites are free.

When you are done, what you post for others to use should look
something like this:

http://img96.imageshack.us/img96/6530/taskmanagerv.jpg
 

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