Error 6 Rmprepusb
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Windows 7/8/8.1 installs using an AutoUnattend.xml file Fake Flash Test Easy2Boot Videos Win8ToGo Windows restore partition GetWAIKTools Get Windows ISOs Donate Win7ToGo WinXPToGo Remove Viruses Blog RMPrepUSB - Home Page Contact Me Read and Sign my Guest Book Latest Site News Hot Tips - good value/performance USB Flash memory pens Useful how to use rmprepusb for windows 7 External Links (inc. Windows 7/8/8.1 ISOs) Downloads Latest RMPrepUSB versions + downloads Sitemap Tutorials, How
Rmprepusb - Bootable Usb Format Utility
To's and Guides 01 - How to image a Windows system using a bootable WinPE USB drive and ImageX 02 - How to rmpartusb command failed create a USB drive that will install one of many choices of Windows OS's (Vista/Win7/Server 2008/XP) 03 - How to install Windows XP from a bootable USB drive 04 - How to boot directly from a USB drive using an rmprepusb windows 7 Emulator or VM under Windows 05 - CHROMIUMOS - a browser OS on a USB Stick 06 - YouTube Video Tutorials 07 - All about 'Fake' SD cards and USB Flash drives 08 - Make a bootable USB drive for the Norton Ghost Symantec Recovery Disk/Tool 09 - How to make a bootable BACKTRACK 4/5 (linux) USB drive 10 - Boot BITDEFENDER Rescue CD from USB as an ISO file 11 - Make a free bootable image recovery USB flash drive
Download Rmprepusb
using FINNIX 12 - Reset a Windows User password 13 - How to find Windows User passwords using OPHCRACK 3.4 14 - Crack or clear your BIOS password with PC CMOS CLEANER (uses Parted Magic) 15 - How to emulate USB booting using Qemu Manager 16 - How to boot to different WinPE versions using a single boot.wim that contains multiple images 17 - StartOS - a 'Windows-like' version of linux on a stick 18 - ISO Files - Burn, Extract, Mount or Edit ISO files 19 - Create your own RMPrepUSB package using Nullsoft Scriptable Installer (NSI) 20 - Add MEMTEST86+ memory test program to your grub4dos menu.lst file 21 - GRUB4DOS GUIDE (with videos) - how to make a multi-boot drive (+examples) Sample grub4dos menus Grub4dos Command Primer Grub4dos Example Menus Fonts and graphics 22 - How to boot PCLINUX (and most other 'difficult' linux versions) without using a 'flat-file' structure 23 - How to fix a 'corrupt' USB drive that causes Windows or RMPrepUSB to stop responding 24 - Boot the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows (UBCD4WIN/XP) or BartPE from a USB drive (includes ISO boot) 25 - Securely ERASE (wipe) your hard disk of ALL data (before disposing of it) 26 - Send and sniff commands to/from your USB device (and see what your BIOS would see!) 27 - Diagnose how your BIOS boots USB drives 28 - Recover files and photos from a corrupt
Windows 7/8/8.1 installs using an AutoUnattend.xml file Fake Flash Test Easy2Boot Videos Win8ToGo Windows restore partition GetWAIKTools Get Windows ISOs Donate Win7ToGo WinXPToGo Remove Viruses Blog RMPrepUSB - Home Page Contact Me Read and Sign my Guest Book Latest Site News Hot Tips - good value/performance USB Flash memory pens Useful External Links (inc. easy2boot download Windows 7/8/8.1 ISOs) Downloads Latest RMPrepUSB versions + downloads Sitemap Tutorials, How To's and Guides easy to boot 01 - How to image a Windows system using a bootable WinPE USB drive and ImageX 02 - How to create a USB drive that will install one of many choices of Windows OS's (Vista/Win7/Server 2008/XP) 03 - How to install Windows XP from a bootable USB drive 04 - How to boot directly from a USB drive using an Emulator or VM under Windows 05 http://www.rmprepusb.com/home/rmpartusb-manual - CHROMIUMOS - a browser OS on a USB Stick 06 - YouTube Video Tutorials 07 - All about 'Fake' SD cards and USB Flash drives 08 - Make a bootable USB drive for the Norton Ghost Symantec Recovery Disk/Tool 09 - How to make a bootable BACKTRACK 4/5 (linux) USB drive 10 - Boot BITDEFENDER Rescue CD from USB as an ISO file 11 - Make a free bootable image recovery USB flash drive using FINNIX 12 - Reset a Windows User password http://www.rmprepusb.com/home/rmprepusb-manual 13 - How to find Windows User passwords using OPHCRACK 3.4 14 - Crack or clear your BIOS password with PC CMOS CLEANER (uses Parted Magic) 15 - How to emulate USB booting using Qemu Manager 16 - How to boot to different WinPE versions using a single boot.wim that contains multiple images 17 - StartOS - a 'Windows-like' version of linux on a stick 18 - ISO Files - Burn, Extract, Mount or Edit ISO files 19 - Create your own RMPrepUSB package using Nullsoft Scriptable Installer (NSI) 20 - Add MEMTEST86+ memory test program to your grub4dos menu.lst file 21 - GRUB4DOS GUIDE (with videos) - how to make a multi-boot drive (+examples) Sample grub4dos menus Grub4dos Command Primer Grub4dos Example Menus Fonts and graphics 22 - How to boot PCLINUX (and most other 'difficult' linux versions) without using a 'flat-file' structure 23 - How to fix a 'corrupt' USB drive that causes Windows or RMPrepUSB to stop responding 24 - Boot the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows (UBCD4WIN/XP) or BartPE from a USB drive (includes ISO boot) 25 - Securely ERASE (wipe) your hard disk of ALL data (before disposing of it) 26 - Send and sniff commands to/from your USB device (and see what your BIOS would see!) 27 - Diagnose how your BIOS boots USB drives 28 - Recover files and photos from a corrupt SD card or any drive (free!) 29 - Boot Hirens Boot CD as an ISO file from a U
you enjoyed a post. Visit www.rmprepusb.com for over 130 Tutorials on USB booting or www.easy2boot.com for a unique USB multiboot solution. Monday, 21 January 2013 Fix 'Error 60 - File not contiguous'! You have probably come across this error message from grub4dos. It occurs when the file that http://rmprepusb.blogspot.com/2013/01/fix-error-60-file-not-contiguous.html it is trying to use is not contiguous. To fix this you can run RMPrepUSB and select https://sites.google.com/site/rmprepusb/home/rmprepusb-faq the USB drive and press Ctrl+F2 to run WinContig and defragment all files on the drive. Making all file contiguous on a drive is not the same as defragmenting the drive. Defragmenting a drive shifts all the files to the beginning of the drive but often does not make all the files contiguous. WinContig does not shift the files if they are already contiguous and so WinContig is quicker windows 7 and more effective than defragging the whole drive using a defrag utility. Note: WinContig, Defraggler and other similar utilities usually need a contiguous run of free clusters on a drive so that they can copy the file into that contiguous space. Even after you run WinContig/Defraggler, you may not be able to copy over another large file and make it contiguous (even though there is enough free space on the drive) - see this post for details. Defraggler has an option to 'Defrag Free Space' which error 6 rmprepusb will fix this problem. This Defraggler map shows that the free clusters are not in one contiguous block. See here for more details. To make a file contiguous,WinContig has to create a new file that is contiguous before it can delete the old non-contiguous file. Thus we need some contiguous free space on the drive that is the same size or larger than the size of the file we are trying to defragment. So for a 3GB file, we will need at least 3GB of contiguous free space on the same drive. A file in a volume exists as a number of clusters (chunks of data). For example, a typical cluster size on an NTFS volume is 4K or 8 sectors. So a 10K file would occupy 3 clusters: Cluster 1 = first 4K Cluster 2 = 2nd 4K Cluster 3 = 3rd 4K cluster (only first 2K of which has valid data) These clusters can be anywhere within the volume. So they could be at cluster no 6,7 and 8 or they could be at cluster no. 3234, 44564 and 332! A utility such as WinContig will rearrange the clusters within a file (if it can). So in the previous example, we might end up with the file consisting of cluster no.s 3234, 3235 and 3236 and so the file is contiguous and has sequential cluster numbers. Recently, a user on reboot.pro had a problem. He had a 6GB VHD file on an 8GB NTFS-formatted USB drive. He ran WinContig but
Write Error - ExitCode 7 error when I try to partition/format my USB drive?This is usually due to Windows locking the USB drive. The usual reason for this is that Windows has not assigned a drive letter to the USB drive. Right-Click on My Computer and choose Manage and then click on Storage - Disk Management. Now locate the USB drive and assign it a drive letter by right-clicking on the large boxed outline for the drive and choosing 'Change Drive Letter and Paths'. Now add a drive letter for this drive - choose a letter well away from any other drives (including any virtual drives you may have).The NTFS format routine also requires Windows to assign a disk letter to the USB drive, so check that a drive letter is assigned if you are having problems formatting as NTFS.How do I load and save configurations (v2.1.614 and later)Let us suppose you want to distribute RMPrepUSB to some users which allows them to create two different kinds of bootable USB pens or USB drives - OR - you just want to choose from a list of your own boot images so you can quickly make any type of boot drive without having to remember what settings you used or where the source files are located... A. Place your source OS files in folders on the C: drive of your hard disk (e.g. C:\ACME\RMPrepUSB\SourceFiles\OS2.4, C:\ACME\RMPrepUSB\SourceFiles\OS2.7, etc.) - Note: we use C: because all users will have a C: drive, if you are just saving configs for your own use, you can use any volume or location. Now for each USB configuration:B. Run RMPrepUSB and actually make your bootable USB drive as you would normally (you do not have to do this, unless you choose Syslinux, but it helps to get it right - if you don't actually make a USB drive then check the contents of the RMPrepUSB.ini file after making it). If you need to use the syslinux option, you must run through a complete format/syslinux operation to set the Raid/Stupid/Syslinux boot folder options so they are saved to the ini file correctly.C. (Optional) After 'Prepare Drive' has finished and the file copy has completed, click on Install grub4dos and choose the grub4dos options as normal (this sets the grub4dos option to e