Bartpe Chkdsk Error
Contents |
Search Browse Forums Guidelines Staff Online Users Members More Activity All Activity My Activity Streams Unread Content Content I Started Search More Malwarebytes.com Anti-Malware Anti-Malware for Mac Anti-Malware
Bartpe Recovery Console
Mobile Anti-Exploit Endpoint Security Breach Remediation More More More All Activity Home General bartpe fixboot Computer Help and Security Updates General Windows PC Help PC Self-Help Articles and Guides Running Check Disk from a BartPE Disk ubcd chkdsk Sign in to follow this Followers 0 Running Check Disk from a BartPE Disk Started by GT500, May 14, 2009 1 post in this topic GT500 Mostly Cantankerous Topic Starter Trusted Advisors
Erd Commander Chkdsk
6,290 posts Location: Fortville, IN ID: 1 Posted May 14, 2009 Once you get the BartPE disk burned to a CD (no, I'm not posting a link to a download here), and get your computer started up off of it, you will get a message asking if you want to enable networking support. Tell it no.Now, click the 'GO' button, and navigate through the menus until you
Knoppix Chkdsk
reach "Check Disk" like in the picture below:Click on "Check Disk", and you should have a black window pop up with some white text. The white text will look like this:It wants to know what drive, so I'll assume drive C. Type in the letter C followed by a : and make sure to press enter afterwards.Example: C:Now it wants more information. It will ask this:Type n for no (obviously you'll want to press enter after typing n). Usually you don't need to do a full sector scan.And again it will be wanting more info. Here's what it should say:This is a silly question. Make sure you type y for yes (pressing enter afterwards once again), otherwise it will cancel the disk check.Now you're at the last step. It'll give you the following information:It's basically telling you what you just told it. You want to run a check disk on drive C and fix errors on the disk. Tell it y for yes (yeah, press enter again), and it should start the check disk. Share this post Link to post Sign in to follow this Followers 0 Go To Topic Listing PC Self-Help Articles and Guides Recently Browsing 0 members No registere
here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting how to run chkdsk when windows won't boot ads with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is
Bootable Usb Chkdsk
a question and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody how to run chkdsk windows 7 before boot can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top How to run chkdsk if I can't boot to Windows up vote 10 down vote favorite I have a NTFS partition with Windows XP https://forums.malwarebytes.org/topic/15520-running-check-disk-from-a-bartpe-disk/ but it has bad sectors and it can't boot. It's a SATA drive and the Windows CD can't access it because it's missing it's drivers, I don't have a floppy drive so I can't load drivers through there. I've tried ntfsfix from Linux but it refuses to do anything. Also tried nftsclone with the --rescue option to at least back up the data but it doesn't work either. How can I run chkdsk in this case? windows-xp ntfs chkdsk share|improve this question asked http://superuser.com/questions/193899/how-to-run-chkdsk-if-i-cant-boot-to-windows Sep 29 '10 at 5:44 solarc 3252413 add a comment| 7 Answers 7 active oldest votes up vote 4 down vote accepted If you have access to another computer and a CD burner, you can download (legally) a Vista or Windows 7 recovery disk and use this to run CHKDSK. Hopefully Vista or Win 7 would have drivers for your ESATA disk. http://neosmart.net/blog/2008/windows-vista-recovery-disc-download/ share|improve this answer answered Sep 29 '10 at 17:38 Larry C 1612 In the I borrowed a Vista DVD, but among the answers this is easier than building a personalized disk, and since I can still access my Linux partition I wouldn't need to access another computer. –solarc Oct 1 '10 at 5:33 > you can download (legally) a Vista or Windows 7 recovery disk Really? I would have thought that you can only download the disk corresponding to the version you own (I could swear seeing a notice to that effect somewhere as well). –Synetech Jul 21 '12 at 3:34 add a comment| up vote 6 down vote If you have access to a Vista or Windows 7 installation DVD, boot from it and get a command prompt, then run the command: chkdsk /r C: Bad sectors does not always mean they are bad - sometimes they are corrupt and chkdsk will attempt to repair them. If it cannot it will mark the sector as bad so it will not be used by the OS. share|improve this answer
Image Product Line' started by magicbird, Mar 19, 2009. Thread Status: Not open for further replies. magicbird Registered Member Joined: Mar 19, 2009 Posts: 10 Hello forum, This is my first post here, i'm dutch please http://www.wilderssecurity.com/threads/how-to-fix-corruption-of-bootsector-on-external-hdd.236554/ forgive my english typo's Yesterday we had 2 new pc's delivered 'DELL VOSTRO 220' with http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?t=113708 Win XP Pro on it. These machines are new (Intel Core 2 Duo) hardware is sata (dvd-ram en internal hdd) The first thing I normaly do is make an full disk image with Acronis True Image 9.1 Workstation [don't know build, but not the latest] so i can restore to the factory default at any point. After doing the windows how to updates i make another image. In the past 2 years i made dozen of images for different systems. At this point i don't have any images of the system(s) and this is my first (and worst) attempt. The target drive is an USB External HDD WD Essentials 500G (with lots of data) Used the CD to start Acronis (in safe mode), it sees the both disks (the internal i want to backup, and the external target how to run hdd) Starting Backup c-partition to file (entering all the requierd data including filename) When the progress bar is in screen it reports to do the 300G in 58 minutes. After 5 seconds the computer begins to beep loud. No more keyboard and mouse activity -> computer hangs. I reset the computer and restarts the above. Now it reports it can see the disks but i can not get the directories to put in the filename [external hdd]. Exited the program, turn computer off. Mounted the external hdd to other computer and this one reports the following error:"disk not formated, do you want to format?" >>> I do not want the 450Gigs of data to be lost, otherwise my little world collapses <<< Now after several hours of scanning with recovery software (only viewing) it is clear to me that all the data is still on the disk. No SMART errors, No USB controller errors, No surface problems ... The Partition reports a correct NTFS partition and when selected it does see the files. The Bootsector reports an unknown Partition So it looks like the write attempt of acronis was not in the file (on the disk) but starting on the first sector of the disk. Need help to be sure what te correct repair attempt should be. Do I want to restore the bootsector Wh
Audio/Visual Club Case and Cooling Fetish CPU & Motherboard Technologia Mobile Computing Outpost Networking Matrix Other Hardware Agora Classifieds Ars DIY Forum (Name TBD!) Operating Systems & Software Battlefront Microsoft OS & Software Colloquium Linux Kung Fu Windows Technical Mojo Distributed Computing Arcana Macintoshian Achaia Programmer's Symposium The Server Room Ars Lykaion Gaming, Extra Strength Caplets The Lounge The Soap Box The Boardroom The Observatory Ars Help & Feedback Ars Subscription Member Areas Image Galleries Scandisk failing: "Cannot Open Volume For Direct Access" 17 posts riskin Ars Praefectus et Subscriptor Tribus: San Francisco, CA Registered: Aug 23, 2000Posts: 3021 Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 12:42 am I had a few hard locks and wanted to run scandisk on my boot drive. Upon reboot, scandisk starts to load normally but then it spits out "cannot open volume for direct access." I've never seen this error before. Any suggestions on what is going on and how to fix it? Thanks in advance. riskin Ars Praefectus et Subscriptor Tribus: San Francisco, CA Registered: Aug 23, 2000Posts: 3021 Posted: Wed Jul 16, 2008 5:39 pm Nobody knows? Should I repost in the NT 2k XP Mojo forum? riskin Ars Praefectus et Subscriptor Tribus: San Francisco, CA Registered: Aug 23, 2000Posts: 3021 Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 7:25 am Update: I connected my external HD and attempted to run scandisk on it and received the same error about not having exclusive access to the disk. Very frustrating. HydraShok Ars Legatus Legionis Tribus: Minneapolis, MN Registered: Jan 16, 2002Posts: 11404 Posted: Thu Jul 17, 2008 1:48 pm What happens if you run "chkdsk /f /x"? (The /X forces the volume to dismount first.)You probably have a service running off the drive and so scandisk can't get access because Windows itself is denying it. At least that would be my first thought. Admittedly, I