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Posts posted by ITinerant
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I know for a fact that with nLite, you can rename the Administrator account to whatever you want. Mine is labelled the same as my MSFN handle, slippykillsticks.
Kewl! I tried nLite and it did just what I wanted.
Thanks
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I looked and didn't see the answer to this anywhere. Is there a way to create a winnt.sif fullunattended and either rename the Administrator or name the administrator a username so that under C:\Documents and Settings directory "Administrator" is not there and in it's stead another name, who is the Administrator is there? TIA0
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Crusher,Jun 15 2004, 06:43 PM] recovery console won't let you do a 'Repair' installation... it will let you do other things like FIXBOOT, CHKDSK etc etc...
you can never have 'Repair' on an unattended installation... do what Alanoll said and make a MULTI-BOOT disc that has a normal not touched windows xp, plus your unattended installation (use the MSFN multi-boot dvd guide to work out how to make a cd that has both installations and still only uses the same amount of space)
anyway... I am a computer technician (head technician)... I can't say that your problem is common, we upgrade peoples computers all the time and Windows will still boot (98, ME, 2K, XP all the same)... you just boot it into windows and install the correct drivers... i've done all types of upgrades including going from a P166 up to a P4-3.2 without needing to reinstall windows...
if your machine isn't even trying to boot the hard drive (if it freezes at a black screen after BIOS and doesn't give you an error or show you the windows boot menu) something else is wrong
Thanks for the advice Crusher,
I actually did the Repair booting to a "Normal" disc after the machine failed to boot to the HDD (see begining of this thread). Perhaps the problem was going from an Intel chipset to an AMD? I dunno I just know the Repair worked.
I've pretty much given up on this quest.
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You can install the Recovery Console locally (winnt32.exe /cmdcons). You can install it from a batch file during unattended insatll winnt32.exe /cmdcons /unattend /dudisable. After the setup is complete, you get a choice of whether to boot into OS or Rec. Console
Thanks VAD, I've never played with the Recovery Console before. Might be a good time to find out what it's all about.
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OEMPreInstall=YES tells setup to copy over the contents of the $OEM$ folder. If it's not inlcuded, then they don't get copied.
Thanks Alanoll,
Now I remember. I tried changing that once with those results.
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I'm thinking there might be some entry to the winnt.sif that will include the Repair option.
For example; the Autopartition="0" leaves the Partition screen in the Windows Setup need to be answered.
I'm hoping there is something such as RepairOption="Yes" that will leave that screen to be answered as well?
I'm still hopeful someone will know. It's been my experience that nothing is impossible, just undiscovered.
I'm still unclear about what OemPreinstall=YES does...
;SetupMgrTag
[Data]
AutoPartition="0"
MsDosInitiated="0"
UnattendedInstall="Yes"
[Unattended]
UnattendMode=FullUnattended
OemSkipEula=Yes
OemPreinstall=YES
Repartition=No
UnattendSwitch="Yes"
WaitForReboot="No"
TargetPath=\WINDOWS0 -
one workaround till you a better solution is found.....
do a mock multiboot....
one with the winnt.sif file, one without on the same disk.......
Thanks for the suggestion, but I'm not really looking for a temporary solution as I am trying to find the reason the Unattended WinXP Installation CD loses that Repair option and what must be done so that it doesn't. I am looking to upgrade quite a few machines and I really don't want to have to babysit each new Repair installation if I can help it.
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As far as i'm aware XP doesn't support changing MB on same install ... it didn't work for me but i remember 98se would've accept it (hmmm ... the old good days )
I see in u're picture that u have an "Repair=R" option it lower area u saying that doesn't work? ...never tried it so far on my unattend ...and can't try it yet cuz i didn't put my unattend on CD yet
That's why you need the Repair option so you can reinstall the Windows directory from the boot disc, which allows a new hardware setup without losing all the other directories and settings.
The picture I posted was from another source. In fact it's from someone's site explaining how...
Windows Installation CD - Repair Current Installation Scroll down to the bottom of the page.
I did the Repair successfully using a "normal disc", but I'm trying to find out how to make an Unattended Installation disc having the same Repair ability that they somehow lose.
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use a normal disc. You obviously have one.
An unattended disc loses the ability for Repair. It's the winnt.sif file. You may be able to change the type fro FullUnattend to DefaultHide but I'm not sure.....
Thanks. I'll keep an eye on this thread just in case somone knows for sure.
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After booting to the CD I get all the regular options of deleting the partition, creating a partition, and which partition to format and install to... however, the one option I no longer have with the Unattended Installation CD is the option to Repair the current installation, thus keeping all settings intact. This is necessary when upgrading hardware, for example, the Motherboard and CPU. I know a clean install is the prefered method, however, I recently upgraded a clients box from a Pentium 3 to an AMD Athlon XP1800+
I just swapped the MB and CPU and used all the old components, including SDRAM.
Tried to boot up and ... bummer! At least it did POST, but then blank.
I really hated to lose all her settings; dial-up, MSN, yada yada...
Unfortunately, the Unattended Installation CD I made skips over this option...
Does anyone know if it's possible not to skip this option when making an Unattended WinXP Installation CD?
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nLite 1.0 Final - RC not
in nLite
Posted
Thanks nuhi I like the new and the rearranged features.
Very much worth the wait!