F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems A person took my boot file and I need to recover it.

A person took my boot file and I need to recover it.

A person took my boot file and I need to recover it.

A
arod05
Junior Member
34
08-02-2016, 01:32 AM
#1
You can locate your boot manager by checking the boot configuration files or using system tools like `lsblk` and `dmesg`. If you have a Linux SSD, it won’t affect the process.
A
arod05
08-02-2016, 01:32 AM #1

You can locate your boot manager by checking the boot configuration files or using system tools like `lsblk` and `dmesg`. If you have a Linux SSD, it won’t affect the process.

R
RamonTV
Junior Member
17
08-02-2016, 03:53 AM
#2
You cannot modify boot.mgr manually. Start from your Windows DVD or USB drive, choose Repair My Computer, then select Start Up Repair. This should resolve the issue; if it fails, proceed to Advanced, then open Command Prompt and enter the listed commands sequentially, maintaining their order. If problems persist, return to Command Prompt and try bcdedit /set {default} device partition=c: followed by the remaining entries. If unsuccessful, reinstall the system as a last resort.
R
RamonTV
08-02-2016, 03:53 AM #2

You cannot modify boot.mgr manually. Start from your Windows DVD or USB drive, choose Repair My Computer, then select Start Up Repair. This should resolve the issue; if it fails, proceed to Advanced, then open Command Prompt and enter the listed commands sequentially, maintaining their order. If problems persist, return to Command Prompt and try bcdedit /set {default} device partition=c: followed by the remaining entries. If unsuccessful, reinstall the system as a last resort.