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PPC
> Computing
Guides > Windows
 Windows 2000 Recovery: Part 4 – The
Recovery Console
Continuing his look at the various options
available when Windows 2000 will not start or load, this week Dave
Cook shows you how to install the Recovery Console.
Windows
2000 might be Microsoft’s most reliable operating system to date,
but it isn’t foolproof. So when things wrong, it’s nice to know
that it offers numerous features aimed at quickly getting your
machine back up and running.
Take the Recovery Console, for example. The Recovery
Console is a text mode process that lets you tackle most of the
important stuff that once upon a time would have been accomplished
at the DOS prompt. This includes several tasks that you couldn’t
have managed in the past without enlisting the help of the Windows
NT Server Resource Kit, or something even more exotic.
Advanced
Users
What the Recovery Console lacks is a graphical user
interface, such as the one found in Safe Mode. Be warned, therefore,
that to feel at home with the console you need to be the type of
person who is comfortable using text-only commands to identify and
locate problem drivers and files. Assuming Safe Mode and other
startup options such as the Last Known Good Configuration don’t
work, the Recovery Console can be regarded as the next logical step
towards getting the system back to normal.
Because the Recovery Console is self-contained, you
can use it (with Administrator privileges) to gain access to the
Windows 2000 system files, read and write data on a local drive
(including FAT16, FAT32, or NTFS partitions) and copy data from a
floppy disk or CD. And that’s just the start! Several built-in
diagnostic tools such as Chkdsk, Fixboot, and Fixmbr are also
available from the console, along with limited access to the
Registry to help you enable or disable services.
Three Choices
Basically, the Recovery Console can be loaded in one
of three ways:
1) Boot from the Windows 2000 installation CD (if
supported by the computer) and select the Repair option.
2) Boot from the four Windows 2000 setup floppies
and select the Repair option. If no boot floppies are available, run
the makeboot.bat file located in the Bootdisk folder on the Windows
2000 CD.
3) Install the Recovery Console files on the local
drive first. This adds the console to a boot menu that appears each
time the computer is started.
The
last option provides the greatest flexibility. It does require some
extra work, though, since the console is not installed by default.
To install the console, insert the Windows 2000 CD in the CD-ROM
drive, and open a command session via Start, Programs, and
Accessories. At the command prompt, switch to your CD-ROM drive
letter and type i386\winnt32.exe /cmdcons. Hit the Enter key and the
Windows Setup window will open with a Recovery Console warning.
Click Yes to install the console. Setup will then install the
Recovery Console files, display a “Successful Completion”
message, and exit. Note that the i386\winnt32.exe /cmdcons command
performs the same system check as a clean Windows 2000 installation.
But that shouldn’t be a problem unless your system is mirrored.
All told, Setup copies approximately 7 MB of files
to the Cmdcons folder on the system disk, starting with the contents
of the boot sector of the Windows 2000 system partition, which is
copied to Cmdcons\bootsect.dat file.
Congratulations! You’ve just added a boot menu to
the startup screen that gives you the option to launch Windows 2000
or boot to the Recovery Console. This menu is basically the same
menu you would use if you had more than one operating system
installed on your computer.
Coming Up
That’s it for now. Next time around we’ll be
covering the console in even greater depth, providing a list of
commands that should help you get that computer back up and running,
and in as short a time possible.
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