Widows xp home will not boot to windows any help available

G

Guest

after acquiring the hacktool.rootkit virus, the system will not boot into
windows even though the virus has been removed. It gets to the black boot
screen just prior to the curser and hangs without going any further. It will
not boot to safe mode or any other option. When I put it in another system
as a slave it shows all the files and windows folder as being present. ????
Does anyone have an option that will fix this problem.
Dave
 
M

Michael Solomon \(MS-MVP\)

Try a Repair Install as follows:
NOTE, while a repair install should leave your data files intact, if
something goes wrong during the repair install, you may be forced to start
over and do a clean install of XP. If you don't have your data backed up,
you would lose your data should that eventuality occur.

Assuming your system is set to boot from the CD-ROM drive and you have an
actual XP CD as opposed to a recovery CD, boot with the XP
CD in the drive and perform a repair install as outlined below. If the
system isn't set to boot from the CD or you are not sure, you need to enter
the system's BIOS. When you boot the system, the first screen usually has
instructions that if you wish to enter set press a specific key, when you
see that, do so. Then you will have to navigate to the boot sequence, if
the CD-ROM drive is not first line, set it first in the boot sequence. Save
your settings and exit with the XP CD in the drive. The system will reboot.

When the system boots, a few screens into the process you may see a message
instructing you
to hit any key in order to boot from the CD along with a countdown. When
you see this be sure to
hit a key on the keyboard, if you miss this instruction and the system fails
to boot from the CD, it's too
late, you'll need to reboot and try again.

Once you have pressed a key, setup should begin. You will see a reference
asking if you need to load special drivers and another notice that if you
wish to begin the ASR (Automatic Recovery Console) depress F2. Just let
setup run past all of that. It will continue to load files and drivers.

Then it will bring you to a screen. Eventually, you will come to a screen
with the option to (1) setup Windows or (2) Repair Windows Installation
using the Recovery console. ***The selection you want at this screen is
"Setup Windows,"
NOT "Repair Windows Installation.

The first option, to setup Windows is the one you want and requires you to
press enter. When asked, press F8 to accept the end user agreement. Setup
will then search for previous versions of Windows. Upon finding your
version, it will ask if you wish to Repair your current installation or
install fresh. Press R, that will run a repair installation. From there
on, follow the screens.

Note, in some cases, you won't receive the repair option, only an option to
reinstall. We have discovered that sometimes this is caused by damaged
boot.ini file that can be repaired as follows and also note, in the
instructions, "K" refers to the CD drive in which you have placed the XP CD,
replace that drive letter with the appropriate letter on your system, "K" is
simply an example.

Reboot, this time taking the immediate R option (this is the section I told
you to skip above. In this case, you will need to get to the Recovery
Console to perform the function below), and if the CD letter is say K: give
these commands

COPY K:\i386\ntldr C:
COPY K:\i386\ntdetect.com C:
(two other files needed - just in case)
ATTRIB -H -R -S C:\boot.ini
DEL C:\boot.ini
BootCfg /Rebuild

Once you've completed this function, reboot and see if you can access XP as
sometimes, the problem is the damaged boot.ini. If you still cannot access
XP, then reboot and re-run the repair install instructions at the beginning
of this message.

If you only have a recovery CD, your options are quite limited. You can
either purchase a retail version of XP which will allow you to perform the
above
among other tools and options it has or you can run your system recovery
routine with the Recovery CD which will likely wipe your drive, deleting all
files but will restore your setup to factory fresh condition.


--
Michael Solomon MS-MVP
Windows Shell/User
Backup is a PC User's Best Friend
DTS-L.Org: http://www.dts-l.org/

"Creative Design and Computers"
 
G

Guest

It will not get past the "Setup is starting windows" screen. It just sits
there without going any further ???? This is so strange. Is it possibly
looking at the hard ware at this point.
Dave
 
M

Michael Solomon \(MS-MVP\)

Well, the next step would be to disconnect any external devices except the
keyboard and mouse and remove any internal cards except the graphics card.

If that fails, you are almost certainly looking at starting over with a
clean install, formatting during XP setup and continuing with the
installation. This will wipe the drive but it will give you a fresh start.

Alternatively, if you have a retail version of XP, you could try installing
it to a separate partition, then trying to access your old files from there
and transferring them to the new setup. If you do not already have a spare
partition, this would require third party software such as Partition Magic
or System Commander in order to create the new partition from space created
from resizing current partitions, something that cannot be done with XP
without destroying the data on the partitions.

--
Michael Solomon MS-MVP
Windows Shell/User
Backup is a PC User's Best Friend
DTS-L.Org: http://www.dts-l.org/

"Creative Design and Computers"
 

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

Similar Threads

Windows xp home 14
Windows XP will not boot 2
XP Won't Boot 2
Boot Problems 27
Computer Won't Boot 5
Windows 10 One of my previous builds is experiencing random, multiple BSODs 9
Messed up my XP boot process 9
Windows XP (SP2) will not boot 5

Top