Perhaps someone can help...
I'm working on a customer's PC which used to have Windows 98 and Windows 2000 in a dual-boot configuration. Everything was fine until he decided to remove the Win98 partition, format it as NTFS, then install XP.
As you can guess, the 2000 partition is no longer bootable. I tried editing the boot.ini file to show Win2K's partition:
[blue]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Professional" /fastdetect
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINNT="Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional" /fastdetect[/blue]
This gave me the prompt at startup but anytime Win2K is selected, I get the error message about the HAL.DLL. I'm a bit stumped since this system was working fine before, so it shouldn't be the HAL.DLL, correct?
I've tried using the Windows 2000 setup disk to access the repair options. I first tried the automatic repair which couldn't locate the Win2K installation. Then I tried the manual repair using the recovery console. Interestingly enough, the system sees the Win2K installation and prompts me for an administrator password.
What can I do from this prompt to rebuild critical boot files without damaging the XP installation on the boot partition?
Thanks in advance...
~cdogg
[tab]"All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind"
[tab][tab]- Aristotle
I'm working on a customer's PC which used to have Windows 98 and Windows 2000 in a dual-boot configuration. Everything was fine until he decided to remove the Win98 partition, format it as NTFS, then install XP.
As you can guess, the 2000 partition is no longer bootable. I tried editing the boot.ini file to show Win2K's partition:
[blue]
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Professional" /fastdetect
multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(2)\WINNT="Microsoft Windows 2000 Professional" /fastdetect[/blue]
This gave me the prompt at startup but anytime Win2K is selected, I get the error message about the HAL.DLL. I'm a bit stumped since this system was working fine before, so it shouldn't be the HAL.DLL, correct?
I've tried using the Windows 2000 setup disk to access the repair options. I first tried the automatic repair which couldn't locate the Win2K installation. Then I tried the manual repair using the recovery console. Interestingly enough, the system sees the Win2K installation and prompts me for an administrator password.
What can I do from this prompt to rebuild critical boot files without damaging the XP installation on the boot partition?
Thanks in advance...
~cdogg
[tab]"All paid jobs absorb and degrade the mind"
[tab][tab]- Aristotle