كيف أن يركّب [ويندووس] 7 أو [ويندووس] [فيستا] على آلة طبيعيّة دون [دفد] أوساط
قد كان [ا لوت] من [ويندووس] [فيستا] و [ويندووس] 7 رخصة يباع [مدي-لسّ] في هذه الأيّام, حيث مشتريات فقط يستلمون قطعة من يصدق شهادة مع أصليّة وشرعيّة منتوج مفتاح يطبع على هو. هو خصوصا يصحّ وتقريبا [ستندرد بركتيس] ل [مسدن] و [تشنت] مشتركات, أو أيّ مشتركات [بتا], الذي يريد منفذة مبكّرة إلى متأخّرة بني إطلاق. بجانب, يجلب كثير الناس الآن [ويندووس] [دفد] [إيس] صورة من [بيتّورّنت] يستعمل سيل مبرد, [إينستد وف] يضطرّ دفعت ل ال [هرد-كبي] [دفد] أوساط أن يكون سلّمت بالبريد.
لذلك يتلقّى [ا لوت] الالناس [سفت كبي] من [ويندووس] تجهيز مبرد, عادة في الشكل ال [إيس فورمت]. عادة, ال [إيس] يضطرّ كنت كتبت أو [بورنت] إلى [دفد] أسطوانة, أيّ يستطيع بعد ذلك كنت استعملت أن يدخل داخل [دفد] إدارة وحدة دفع أن يبدأ التجهيز من [ويندووس] [فيستا] و [ويندووس] 7. ما لم ال [إيس] يكون يكون استعملت أن يركّب في آلة فعليّة يزوّد بمكروسوفت [بك] فعليّة, [فيرتثل سرفر], [فمور] أو شمس [إكسفم] [فيرتثلبوإكس], أيّ يستطيع علات ال [إيس] صورة بما أنّ قرص كنيز أو [دفد] إدارة وحدة دفع.
لا يتلقّى لمستعملة الذي لا يريد أن يبدّد [دفد] أسطوانة أن يحرق ال [إيس] إلى أوساط طبيعيّة, و[وينب] ([ويندووس] [ب]) أسطوانة ذو رأسمال مجازفة, هنا [ووركرووند] طريقة أن يركّب [ويندووس] [فيستا] و [ويندووس] 7 داخل حاسوب طبيعيّة [هرد ديسك دريف] أو جزّأت (حجم) مباشرة مع [إيس] دون كتابة أو يحرق إلى أسطوانة. ال [ويثووت-ديسك] تجهيز طريقة مفيدة خصوصا أثناء [بتا] و [رك] فترة من [أبرت سستم] جديدة في ال يجعل, حيث الجديدة بني وصيغة جديدة يكون يطلق وينشر كلّ الآن وبعد ذلك. يفترض هذا [تثتوريل غيد] أنّ [ويندووس] جديدة 7 أو [ويندووس] [فيستا] كنت سيركّب واستبدل الأصليّة يتواجد [أبرت سستم] حاليّا يركّب. التعليمات يستطيع كنت عددت قليلا (في الدّرجة الأولى على [هرد ديسك] حاجز يستعمل) أن يلائم داخل حاجة القارئات الذي يريد أن يتلقّى [دول-بووت], [مولتي-بووت], أو ببساطة فقط أن يحسن ركّبت إلى [أس] جديدة.
- ركّبت [ا] فعليّة [كد/دفد] إدارة وحدة دفع على يتواجد [ويندووس] [أبرت سستم].
- علات [ويندووس] [فيستا] أو [ويندووس] 7 تجهيز [دفد] [إيس] صورة يستعمل الإدارة وحدة دفع فعليّة.
- Copy all files inside the virtual CD/DVD drive mounted with the ISO into any folder on any partition or hard disk drive not going to be used to install the Windows OS. For example, copy into E:\Windows7.
- Copy the bootmgr and boot folders nested inside the copied folder (i.e. \Windows7) to root directory of system boot drive, typically C:\.
Note: For Windows Vista, users may need to use this step: Copy the bootmgr folder from E:\Windows7 to C:\ root directory, copy E:\Windows7\boot\boot.sdi file to same folder in C:\boot folder, and then copy bootsect.exe from the E:\Windows7\boot\ folder to C:\ drive.
Note: boot folder in system boot drive is hidden system folder.
- Create a new folder named sources under the C:\ root folder.
- Copy the boot.win file inside \Windows7\sources folder to the source folder created in the system boot drive, normally C:\.
- Open a command prompt as administrator.
- Run the following command (change the C to your drive path letter if applicable):
C:\boot\bootsect.exe /nt60 C:
For Windows Vista users who copied bootsect.exe to C:\ root folder, use the following command instead:
C:\bootsect.exe /nt60 C:
A successful message is the command completes successfully.
- Change the name or label of the boot system partition local disk to BDCP or any name you prefer that easier to remember and type (in DOS command promot, use label command).
- Restart the computer.
- After booting up, the system will start the corresponding Windows installation process. Select the applicable language to install, time and currency format (regional settings locale) and keyboard or input method in the installation wizard dialog.
- On the next screen, user will be presented with option to Install Windows. DO NOT press on Install Windows button, instead, click on Repair My Computer link on the bottom left corner.
- In the Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) System Recovery Options dialog window, click on Command Prompt to open a DOS Prompt window.
- Run the format command to format the primary hard disk or partition to clean state:
format c: /q
Note: /q switch, which perform quick format can be omitted to full format. And if existing hard disk partition is of FAT32 filesystem format, use format c: /q /fs:ntfs to convert the file system to NTFS while formatting. Before formatting begins, the command may prompt for hard disk drive or partition label name, if so, enter accordingly (i.e. BDCP).
- After format completed, start the Windows Vista or Windows 7 installation process again by manually running the setup.exe located in the copied. Note that the setup.exe is not the one located on boot system drive which copied at later step, as the boot drive has been formatted. For example:
E:\Windows7\sources\setup.exe
- Continue with installation procedures by following on-screen instructions as per normal practice.
It’s also possible to install Windows 7 or Windows Vista from USB flash drive or portable hard disk.
IMPORTANT: The page is machine translated and provided "as is" without warranty. Machine translation may be difficult to understand. Please refer to original English article whenever possible.
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May 27th, 2009 03:51
I can’t get this to work.
I keep getting the existing bootmgr only option is MSDOS, VISTA or older OS…
Only Vista worked before and the same is true now…. Did I miss a step?
May 17th, 2009 06:36
WTF..this is way too complicated.. ARE YOU SERIOUS? THERE ISN’T AN EASIER WAY?
May 14th, 2009 01:32
Erm..I have a bit of a nasty situation here. When I run C:/boot/bootsect.exe/nt60 C: it says:
“Could not read the existing bootcode from this volume. No bootcode was successfully updated” What seems to be the problem?
May 10th, 2009 10:53
Will this work for windows 7 RC?
April 20th, 2009 22:35
Can not find a bootmgr folder in the windows 7 folder.
My machine wont complete setup
“BOOTMGR is missing” is the only msg i get
March 18th, 2009 18:52
I just realised that i dont want to format my main partition. is there any way to undo the change of the booting? cos i cant boot normally now!
thanks
March 4th, 2009 12:33
Chris:
I’m just guessing that you ran the bootsect command while on the C: drive. Perhaps try running the command by first changing to the drive containing the virtual DVD, going to the boot folder there and then running the command to modify the C: drive. So if your DVD is at drive F: then do these commands:
f:
cd \boot
bootsect.exe /nt60 c:
This will avoid any access denied error messages caused by the inability of bootsect to lock the C: drive to make changes.
March 4th, 2009 12:18
I have used this method successfully for Vista, Win7 and Win Server 2008. In step 15, when you run setup.exe, make sure you run the one in the sources folder as directed. (There is another, smaller setup.exe file at the root of that drive. I made the mistake of running it instead. You do get an installtion to start, but it will quickly give you the error “A CD/DVD drive device driver is missing…” So just follow the instructions given.)
Thanks for the technique.
January 29th, 2009 03:34
Hey i have question about step 8 and 9.
when i enter C:\boot\bootsect.exe /nt60 C: into cmd, i get an unsucessful message but when i enter C:\boot\bootsect.exe /nt60 C:BDCP i get a message to do something but i don’t what do can u explain those steps more clearly?
January 27th, 2009 04:15
THERE IS AN EASIER WAY!
If you have it installed on a secondary machine, say one WITH a DVD drive, EASILY winclone the entire boot camp partition to an external harddrive, connect the HD to the computer without a drive you wish to install windows 7 on, partition using boot camp, then restore the Winclone image to the partition, there you have it, a perfect copy of your already installed Windows 7 on a new machine, works easily, and saves time!
~cp
January 25th, 2009 09:20
January 12th, 2009 01:36
You definitely do not need to have a USB key big enough to hold Windows 7. Just use GParted to shrink the C:\ partition by ~10GB and create a new NTFS partition with the free space, then go back to windows and run setup.exe from the mounted iso. Tell it to install in the second partition. If it hasn’t done so automatically, add an entry to boot.ini for the second partition Win7 install. You now have a dual boot of your current OS and Windows 7.
January 11th, 2009 18:32
WTH. it says BOOTMGR is missing after formatting drive C:
Now my laptop won’t boot :C
January 8th, 2009 10:09
@Greg,
Can you install win7 from Vista x64? I know you can’t go the other way but I was wondering if you can install win7 using vista x64.
January 6th, 2009 02:28
in fact, i found this method to be simpler than installing from usb stick. no matter what i did, my msi wind u90(XP Home) wouldn’t start from the stick.
method described above went pretty smoothly up until step15. %) the setup just wouldn’t start from where it was supposed to (disk e: in this case), because it seemed it needed some install files on disk c: (which is waaaay strange). ofcourse they weren’t there since you need to carpet-bomb disk c: in step14
so, i just copied install files to disk c: (after it’s been formatted) and ran setup AGAIN FROM DISK E:
somewhere in the end of installation win7 said it was unable to update system disk (or something like that), and after a couple of
minutes of doing nothing it returned to Windows Recovery Options Screen. There it’ll it allow you to “repair the bootsector and restart”. don’t hesitate, do it. After restart, setup will pick up where it’s left and continue installing devices. Ten minutes after that i had a fresh windows7 on an msi wind
January 5th, 2009 17:00
[...] Via | My Digital Life [...]
December 25th, 2008 20:31
I installed Windows 7 from a mounted virtual drive into a second new formatted partition with no problem. Just ran it from the virtual mounted drive and after it copied the files, it restarted and found the drive to finish installation. I then sent the ISO over my home network to my other computers and did the same thing, easily.
Now I am faced with a more complicated install for a third partition where I want to test Vista 64 bit. It is not possible to install 64 from a 32 bit environment, even virtually. My plan is to create a small sliver parition to hold the install files, then copy them either virtually or over the partition wall into the sliver partition, go into that partition and run the Setup file to start installation to a third newly formatted Vista 64 partition. I used this method once before to install Vista onto my C:partition from a sliver partition created just to run the Install from, then kept it as a recovery partition.
December 25th, 2008 20:31
Why not just use a bootable USB stick, its much quicker to setup and easier too.
December 25th, 2008 20:24
Once before I installed Vista from a sliver partition into which I copied the files from a virtually mounted Vista Install ISO. I installed onto my C: drive by going into the new sliver partition and running the Vista setup file from there. I saved the sliver partition to use as recovery.
My problem right now is trying to install 64 bit Vista Ultimate using a virtual drive, since my other two OS (7 and Vista) are both 32 bit and it is not possible to install 64 bit from a 32 bit environment.
My solution is to copy the files from a virtual drive to a 4th sliver partition, then go into that partition and run Setup telling it to install to my new formatted 3rd partition. This way nothing is installed from 32 bit, as the files are run from a partition made only for that purpose.
Using this method I’m not even sure virtual is necessary since I could un-rar the ISO from one of my other drives and copy the files into the new partition to be run from that partition. What you think?
December 24th, 2008 22:47
Has anybody tested this procedure?
I own a 1GHz Pentium II Notebook without DVD or CD-Drive and WITHOUT option to boot from USB.
Maybe this is the right method to install Windows 7?