I emulated a range of configurations in VMware and tried different physical ones. Of course you're free to split it into single entries for XP and Vista as well. (Just edit'n delete the "find /bootmgr" line, to boot XP) This way I also got the possibility to choose between XP and Vista, in case of both are installed. Once the OS is booted, all drives are available. In what I've tried, the 2nd mapping-step seems not needed.
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Well, I think a full exchange of the drives can be done like.įind -set-root -devices=h /ntldr & map () (hd0) | map (hd0) ()įind -set-root -devices=h /bootmgr & map () (hd0) | map (hd0) () īTW IMHO what we still miss (unless I am mistaken and it has been added lately ) is a "SHIFT" and "circular stack", that might become handy in a number of situations, compare with this: The issue with Icecube's approach might be that you will anyway map first disk (first disk without the UFD connected) to (hd0).īOTH will work in all most common setups though let's say conventionally on 99.91% of setups.
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The issue with your approach is that since you are "looking" for a bootloader file that may be on different disks, the disk where bootmgr is will alway "prevail" on the one hosting ntldr, thus you might be unable to recover the NT/2K/XP/2003 install (but access the Vista /Server 2008/7 one). Theoretically the Icecube one's is "better" as it provides an Exchange for the disks, whilst yours re-maps just the "found" disk to (hd0) (and the actual original first disk becomes "nowhereland"). Not really-really (in the sense that BOTH the one posted by Icecube and by you may fail on some particular configuration). Whoops, this post actualy should have been posted here: Hope this is usefull, and someone maybe can verify this. This one is able to konboot proper, no matter which (hdX) the UDF or Windows-device is, and even if Plop was loaded. But please let know if I'm wrong.įind -set-root -ignore-floppies -ignore-cd /bootfiles/konFLOPPY.imgįind -set-root -devices=h /ntldr & map () (hd0)įind -set-root -devices=h /bootmgr & map () (hd0) My method seems way more easy and functional to me. What if the Windows device you need to boot is not hd1? - The example above won't work. Well, it looks for the UDF-device-number, but.
![kon boot free usb kon boot free usb](https://rmprepusb.com/rmprep/56---forgotten-password---no-problem-with-kon-boot/4245d770160d05f54541602c2050a676.jpg)
![kon boot free usb kon boot free usb](https://howtodofor.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/kon-boot-setup.jpg)
Without overwriting your old password! In other words, you can log in to your Windows profile without knowing your password. It can now silently bypass the authentication process of Windows based operating systems. It was mainly created for Ubuntu, later the author has made a few add-ons to cover some other Linux distributions.Įntire Kon-Boot was written in pure x86 assembly, using old grandpa-geezer TASM 4.0.
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For Windows systems, it allows you to enter any password protected profile without any knowledge of the password.
![kon boot free usb kon boot free usb](https://content.instructables.com/ORIG/FSZ/SOAM/GYCSRI20/FSZSOAMGYCSRI20.png)
In the current compilation state, it allows you to log into a Linux system as the ’ root’ user without typing the correct password or to elevate privileges from current user to root.