"microsvc" <> wrote in message
news:86BD1A79-DFF3-4583-97AA-...
> Hi, Everyone seems to not understand my question. Here goes: After
> restoring
> using the DVD, I see a folder called BOOT on my slave drive and bootex.log
> and bootmgr. I dont see these files on drive c:. Can I just MOVE the
> boot
> folder and the 2 files to c: so I can boot off c:, then delete whats on my
> slave drive? Thanks!
>
>
> "Andy" wrote:
>
>> On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 17:15:05 -0800, microsvc
>> <> wrote:
>>
>> >I rebooted today and I was informed the bootmgr is missing. I was able
>> >to
>> >boot with the dvd, do a repair and now It's booting, but now I see a
>> >folder
>> >called BOOT on my slave drive and bootex.log and bootmgr. I dont see
>> >these
>> >files on drive c: nor do I see boot.ini (does vista use it?). Can I
>> >just
>> >MOVE the boot folder and the 2 files to c: so I can boot off c:, then
>> >delete
>> >whats on my slave drive? Thanks!
>>
>> Those files are normally hidden. If you want to boot from the C drive,
>> set your bios to boot from that disk.
>>
Just because you're seeing files called "boot" doesn't mean you're booting
from that drive.
Click Start, then right click on Computer, choose Manage. In Computer
Management click Disk Management.
Check the drives, you'll see the Volume (C: D: and so forth) the layout,
type, file system, and the part you really want to look at STATUS. This
will list everything the drive is actively set up for.
On my system, C: is "Healthy (System, Boot, Page File, Active, Crash Dump,
Primary Partition)
D: is "Healthy (Page File, Primary Partition)
As you can see Boot is listed for my C: drive, indication that I'm booting
from the C: drive.
If yours has boot listed on the C: drive, guess what? You're booting from
the C: drive.
Check this before you assume anything. When you did the repair on the drive
it may have simply backed up those files to your D: drive, the fact that you
can see them means they weren't marked hidden by the system. The system
usually marks these hidden so people that don't know what they are won't
delete them (or try to, that is) from the boot drive.
Mic
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