Hi~
I received the message 'bootmgr is missing' when I installed DTLite, only just after I had freshly installed Windows 7 operating system on my ssd. This drive used to carry vista, which I got rid of through a format.
The problem couldn't even be resolved by the windows installation disk's automated system repair utility. What's worse is that when I attempted to format the drive once more in order to do a fresh install of the operating system, it couldn't find it -even though the drive was still seen in bios! Apparently, the partition table had become corrupt!
~i tried to manually rebuild the BCD in the windows repair's command prompt (i.e. bcdedit /export C: \BCD_Backup etc.), to no avail.
~in order to finally resolve this, i had to remove the ssd from the desktop and plugged it into a laptop as an external drive, using a 3rd party partition-fixing program to get the job done!
...
I'm more than a little frustrated at this, as I've always been able to rely on Daemon Tools as one of the first apps to install upon acquiring a fresh operating system! Indeed, I'd very much like to continue using DTools products, but certainly not at the expense of my hair follicles (the price of stressing over time wasted on reinstalling entire os's!)...
~i guess i could backup the bootmgr sector, or even image the entire drive - but isn't there also a workaround that means i'd never even have to resort to such backups...?
...
Cheers
I received the message 'bootmgr is missing' when I installed DTLite, only just after I had freshly installed Windows 7 operating system on my ssd. This drive used to carry vista, which I got rid of through a format.
The problem couldn't even be resolved by the windows installation disk's automated system repair utility. What's worse is that when I attempted to format the drive once more in order to do a fresh install of the operating system, it couldn't find it -even though the drive was still seen in bios! Apparently, the partition table had become corrupt!
~i tried to manually rebuild the BCD in the windows repair's command prompt (i.e. bcdedit /export C: \BCD_Backup etc.), to no avail.
~in order to finally resolve this, i had to remove the ssd from the desktop and plugged it into a laptop as an external drive, using a 3rd party partition-fixing program to get the job done!
...
I'm more than a little frustrated at this, as I've always been able to rely on Daemon Tools as one of the first apps to install upon acquiring a fresh operating system! Indeed, I'd very much like to continue using DTools products, but certainly not at the expense of my hair follicles (the price of stressing over time wasted on reinstalling entire os's!)...
~i guess i could backup the bootmgr sector, or even image the entire drive - but isn't there also a workaround that means i'd never even have to resort to such backups...?
...
Cheers
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