using SUBST command upon boot

Z

z f

Hi,

on my XP lap-top with 40GB hard-disk, there is only one partition C: - NTFS
i need to configure d: drive (preferebly without formattnig and reinstalling
windows.)
i heard of the SUBST command that can do the task of adding d: volume that
actually points to a folder c:\myD on the original partition.

problem is the subst command should run upon startup, and if i install
programs on the virtual D: it will not be available upon services startup
only on the user-init stage, and this could cause problems.

i need the D: drive tp created as early as possible in the start-up process
preferebly be fixed.

i heard also of the linkd utility that should do the same work but better, i
downloaded it from the windows 2003 server resource kit but couldn't get it
to work on my XP machine.

is there a way to cause linkd to work on XP machine?
is there a way to persist the d: drive using linkd, subst or any other way
so it will be available upon services startup for a place for installed
programs that should be started upon system startup process?

TIA, z.
 
D

David H. Lipman

Place the fully qualified SUBST.EXE command in...

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run

Dave



|
|
| Hi,
|
| on my XP lap-top with 40GB hard-disk, there is only one partition C: - NTFS
| i need to configure d: drive (preferebly without formattnig and reinstalling
| windows.)
| i heard of the SUBST command that can do the task of adding d: volume that
| actually points to a folder c:\myD on the original partition.
|
| problem is the subst command should run upon startup, and if i install
| programs on the virtual D: it will not be available upon services startup
| only on the user-init stage, and this could cause problems.
|
| i need the D: drive tp created as early as possible in the start-up process
| preferebly be fixed.
|
| i heard also of the linkd utility that should do the same work but better, i
| downloaded it from the windows 2003 server resource kit but couldn't get it
| to work on my XP machine.
|
| is there a way to cause linkd to work on XP machine?
| is there a way to persist the d: drive using linkd, subst or any other way
| so it will be available upon services startup for a place for installed
| programs that should be started upon system startup process?
|
| TIA, z.
|
|
|
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top