. Many users in the process of installing Vista, the blue screen will appear when restarting. The reason is very simple: the SATA driver is not loaded.
Originally, we suggested that the hard disk settings be modified in BiOS, and the hard disk is set to compatibility mode without Archi mode. As a result, friends on the Internet said that they couldn't fix it. We studied it for more than 20 days and finally found a solution. It is now possible to manually add SATA drivers and registration information to the Vista temporary directory from XP after the installation is restarted.
First of all, our central idea is to manually add our own disk controller driver (nonsense) in the Vista installation directory. This requires 2 steps to complete:
1. In the temporary installation directory of Vista, place our own driver file.
2, add my own driver key value in Vista's registry. (Mao Chairman Education teaches us: Be kind to people, you secretly add a large number of documents under the directory of people, how to inform people: Hello, Vista~~ even in your directory, add even baby files, installed Remember to add it even! If you miss a ~~, then you will die to see it.)
Well, with the theoretical basis, we will act!
Normally install Vista under XP until the first reboot, restart the blue screen (normal -_-". Re-enter XP to operate.
No.1: Copy your own disk driver files to the relevant location in the Vista temporary directory.
Specifically: *.sys files are placed in windows\\system32\\drivers in the Vista temporary directory, *.inf and others The file is placed in Windows\\inf in the temporary directory of Vista.
No.2: How to modify the registry of Vista? We need to use the registry database of the current XP system as a temporary place to operate. Just create a temporary folder. : My location is under c:\
aid. Then open the registry, find all the key values of the driver you want to install in XP and save all of them in the file sata.reg. Copy sata.reg to c :\
aid.
Then create a new text file a.txt in the raid folder. Open a and add the following content (//after my words don't need to write):
if not exist system goto end
Copy system system.bak //Back up system files.
reg load hklm\\hk97sys system //Write the contents of the system file to Hkey_LOCAL_MacHINE\\hk97sys, hk97sys is a temporary new key.
regedit /s SATA.reg //The value of sata.reg Add the current registry and save the system file.
reg unload hklm\\hk97sys //Remove the hk97sys key value added in the current registry.
Brace //Let you see the result~
:end
After saving, save a.txt and rename it to a.cmd. Ready to operate. Copy the file named system under Windows\\system32\\config in the Vista temporary directory to c:\\ Sata directory. (Why should I copy the system file? Because that stuff is the location of the registry database.)
Execute a.cmd. If the prompt is successful, copy the current system file back to its original location to overwrite the original file. So we will add our own driver information to the Vista registry.
Shut down and restart the computer into the Vista installer. If there is no blue screen, congratulations! (I have succeeded in pulling it here!)
Continue the installation process sequence. The second automatic restart. After restarting----blue screen! Hurry to analyze the reason, N brain cells agree that it is still a driver problem! The original work was only done on the Vista installer, however, the Vista system file on the hard disk now. It was copied from the Vista installation CD! (The installation CD is not included!) It is not the stuff in the previous Vista temporary directory. . .
It is easy to know the reason, let's reapply. Only this time the object is no longer a temporary directory for Vista. It is the disk where the Vista system is located (even in the E disk, everyone changes according to their own situation).
No.1: Copy your own disk driver files to the relevant locations in the Vista system directory.
Specifically: *.sys file is placed in E:\\windows\\system32\\drivers, *.inf and other files are placed in E:\\Windows\\inf.
No.2. Copy the file named system under E:\\Windows\\system32\\config to the c:\\sata directory. Execute a.cmd. If the prompt is successful, copy the current system file back to its original location to overwrite the original file.
Shut down again to restart the computer and enter the Vista installer. If there is no blue screen, congratulations! (Here will be successful pull!)
Then what? Then wait to ~~~ even waited for 20 minutes, then appeared in front of the Vista system to pull!