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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Vista Home Premium 32bit | No option for Vista at start up I was using Windows Vista on my laptop. Then I installed WindowsXp on a separate drive. I expected my system to be a dual boot system but it shows no option for Windows Vista at start up. Please guide me. Regards |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: No option for Vista at start up Try going here.Get Easy BCD-------------http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1 "mq15" <guest@xxxxxx-email.com> wrote in message news:1bdc4082aa7b5e68f2095559da4a4eee@xxxxxx-gateway.com... Quote: > > I was using Windows Vista on my laptop. Then I installed WindowsXp on a > separate drive. I expected my system to be a dual boot system but it > shows no option for Windows Vista at start up. Please guide me. > Regards > > > -- > mq15 |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: No option for Vista at start up Hi, mq15. No matter where you install Windows (Win2K or XP or Vista or Win7), it always installs as TWO pieces: a very large piece and a very small piece. The big piece (several GBs) goes into the \Windows folder tree in whichever partition you tell Setup to install it. This could very will be the second partition on your only HDD, or the 4th partition on your third HDD - or wherever. But the small piece will ALWAYS go to the System Partition, which is typically the first partition on your first HDD. Even if another OS (Vista?) has already install its small piece there, the new OS will install its own small piece there, overwriting the former version as necessary. For Vista, the small piece consists of the one file "bootmgr" (no extension) and a few files in the C:\Boot folder. For WinXP, the small piece is just 3 files: NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM and Boot.ini. In addition, each OS writes its boot sector code into the first physical sector on that System Partition. Since the boot sector is not a file, it can't be copied or deleted or otherwise handled by any normal applications; only special utilities like bootsect.exe and bootcfg - and Setup.exe from the install CD/DVD - can write this sector. When Vista was installed on your laptop, its Setup wrote bootmgr into that partition and wrote the boot sector to look for bootmgr. But when you installed WinXP, even though it put the \Windows folder on the other partition, as you instructed, it put NTLDR, etc., into the System Partition (probably Drive C and then overwrote the boot sector on C: withinstructions to look in C:\ for NTLDR at boot time. This works fine for booting WinXP, but it completely ignores Vista. To fix the problem, put the Vista DVD into the drive and reboot from it. Choose to Repair your Startup. This will save the WinXP boot sector into a new file, then write the Vista boot code into the boot sector again. Then, when you reboot, the system will read the Vista boot sector, which will load bootmgr, which will present the OS menu, from which you can choose to boot Vista or an "Earlier version of Windows". If you choose Earlier, bootmgr will step back out of the way and let NTLDR take control to complete the boot into WinXP. In my mind, I picture this boot process like the letter "Y". The process starts with the bottom leg of the "Y", which is in the System Partition (almost always Drive C . Then, based on instructions it finds there, itwill branch to Vista or WinXP. But the starting point is always the same. (Even when you had only Vista, the system was still the same: the boot process started with the bottom leg of the "Y", but since there was only one OS, the "Y" looked like an "I". The system still started with the boot sector, then bootmgr, then the C:\Windows folder holding ntoskrnl.exe and the rest of Vista. But if Vista is in C: and WinXP is in X:, the path will either be C:\bootmgr to C:\Windows for Vista, or C:\bootmgr\NTLDR to X:\Windows for WinXP.) You broke the Golden Rule of dual-booting: Always install the newest OS last. Vista knows what to do if it finds WinXP already installed. But WinXP has no idea what to do with Vista, which didn't exist when WinXP's Setup.exe was written. Since you broke the rule, you must now boot from the Vista DVD and let it rewrite the boot sector on C: and put the proper entry into the BCD so that bootmgr knows that WinXP has been installed since Vista Setup was run originally. RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX rc@xxxxxx Microsoft Windows MVP Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100 "mq15" <guest@xxxxxx-email.com> wrote in message news:1bdc4082aa7b5e68f2095559da4a4eee@xxxxxx-gateway.com... Quote: > > I was using Windows Vista on my laptop. Then I installed WindowsXp on a > separate drive. I expected my system to be a dual boot system but it > shows no option for Windows Vista at start up. Please guide me. > Regards > > > -- > mq15 |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| Vista Home Premium 32bit | Re: No option for Vista at start up Thanks a lot R. C. White |
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