This repository has been archived by the owner on Oct 9, 2018. It is now read-only.
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
readme.txt
207 lines (165 loc) · 10.4 KB
/
readme.txt
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
______ _____ _
| ___ \ |_ _| | |
| |_/ /___ ___ _____ _____ _ __ _ _ | | ___ ___ | |___
| // _ \/ __/ _ \ \ / / _ \ '__| | | | | |/ _ \ / _ \| / __|
| |\ \ __/ (_| (_) \ V / __/ | | |_| | | | (_) | (_) | \__ \
\_| \_\___|\___\___/ \_/ \___|_| \__, | \_/\___/ \___/|_|___/
__/ | AnarethoS
|___/ Recovery Tools HP Edition
________________________________________________________________________________
Recovery Tools 4.0.1 Windows 7 MBR for Hewlett-Packard (HP)
________________________________________________________________________________
This package is a special Recovery Tools 4.0.1 package made for HP laptops
running Windows 7 in MBR mode. It's based on the excellent work done by
AnarethoS (www.anarethos.com).
Major changes between the official AnarethoS package and this one are:
* The HP F11 BIOS recovery key is working properly. When hitting this key
at startup, the Recovery Tools package will be run from the Recovery
partition, by the BIOS boot-code.
* The hard-disk is split in 2 partitions for the data, 1 for the OS
(Size: 200GB) and the other for the user data.
* All the Recovery Tools were translated into French language. Read the
"readme.txt" file inside the "lang" directory to learn more.
Everything was pre-configured in order to be ready-to-use on HP laptop
running Windows 7 in MBR mode.
___ __ _ _ _
/ __|___ _ _ / _(_)__ _ _ _ _ _ __ _| |_(_)___ _ _
_| (__/ _ \ ' \| _| / _` | || | '_/ _` | _| / _ \ ' \ ________________________
\___\___/_||_|_| |_\__, |\_,_|_| \__,_|\__|_\___/_||_| 1. Configuration
|___/
The first thing to do before using this package is to install Windows AIK.
You must install this software because Recovery Tools need ImageX and OscdImg
from that Microsoft package. Get Windows AIK here:
https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=5753
Before installing Recovery Tools to the target computer, you can configure 3
little things:
* The Recovery Tools language (when used from the target computer)
* The size of the C:\ partition
* The presence of a D:\ partition
1. Configuring the Recovery Tools language:
If your target computer is in the French language, go to the "lang"
directory and follow the steps described in that directory.
By default, the Recovery Tools language is set to English.
2. Changing the C:\ partition size
If you want to change the size of the OS partition (C:\) you need
to modify these files: "AutoUnattend.xml" from the "AutoUnattend"
directory and "ResetPartitions.txt" from the "Settings" directory.
Search for the value 204801 (i.e. 204801 MB = 200 GB) in these files.
3. Removing the presence of the D:\ partition
It isn't recommended. But if you want to, just remove the entries
from the "AutoUnattend.xml" from the "AutoUnattend" directory and in
"ResetPartitions.txt" from the "Settings" directory.
Please note, the original AnarethoS package was provided without a D:\
partition.
___ _ _ _ _ _
|_ _|_ _ __| |_ __ _| | |__ _| |_(_)___ _ _
__| || ' \(_-< _/ _` | | / _` | _| / _ \ ' \__________________________________
|___|_||_/__/\__\__,_|_|_\__,_|\__|_\___/_||_| 2. Installation
This package is stand-alone, you don't need to use the official Recovery
Tools package from AnarethoS.
Every steps below are done from the "Windows 7 Recovery Tools" directory from
the "package" directory.
1. Plug an empty USB key to your host computer.
2. Go to the "AutoUnattend" directory then copy the "AutoUnattend.xml" file
to the root of the USB key plugged in step 1.
3. Start the "01-Get_Required_Files.cmd" batch file in Administrator mode.
You only need to do that once. This'll grab some required files from
various sources (e.g. Internet and Windows AIK).
Note: Don't worry about the Administrator mode. Nothing will be modified
on your computer (you can edit the batch script file if you want check).
4. Execute the "02-Update_Settings.cmd" file. Wait until the "install.zip"
file is generated. Copy that file to the root of the same USB key plugged
in step 1 (at this step, Recovery Tools is ready to be installed).
5. Now plug this USB key to the target computer.
Insert your official Windows 7 setup disk into the target computer.
6. Run the Windows 7 installation. Windows 7 setup should start in "Audit"
mode (i.e. the first setup screen is white instead of blue). Choose the
Windows 7 edition you want to install then hit "Next". Wait until the
installation completes.
7. The computer should be on the Desktop, logged with the special
'Administrator' account. CLOSE THAT SYSPREP WINDOW. DON'T TOUCH IT. NEVER.
8. Now it's time to install the HP drivers. Grab them from the HP website,
and install them. You can restart the computer as many times you want.
The computer will remains in Audit mode until you install the Recovery
Tools (see the next step below). By the way, it's a good idea to run
Windows Update now.
9. After you done setting up everything you want to, unzip the "install.zip"
package on the Desktop. Run the "Install - Windows 7.cmd" batch file.
This will install the Recovery Tools to the target computer.
10. Wait until the computer restart. After the "Windows 7 Capture" program
is done, the computer is ready for the end-user.
Wow, you did it! everything is now ready!
**********************************************************************
** Never redistribute this package without cleaning up everything. **
** **
** To perform this operation, execute the following scripts: **
** - "03-Package_Cleanup.cmd" **
** - "04-Package_Remove_Licensed_Files.cmd" **
** **
** Thank you for your understanding. **
**********************************************************************
_ _
| | | |___ __ _ __ _ ___
_| |_| (_-</ _` / _` / -_)______________________________________________________
\___//__/\__,_\__, \___| 3. Usage
|___/
You have multiple possibilities to use the Recovery Tools on the target
computer when installed with this package.
When logged to Windows:
1. Start the "Recovery Tools" from the Start Menu. From that menu, you'll be
able to:
a. Boot into the Recovery environment (WinRE), and from there, a new
option is available allowing you to:
- Browse the hard-disk (by using Double Commander)
- Editing the Registry
- Editing text files with Notepad
- Restoring the computer to its initial state
b. Create a set of DVDs containing everything to recreate the
configuration (including partition layout, softwares, etc.).
c. Create an USB key (max 32 GB) to restore the computer (like the DVD
option) or try to repair an existing Windows installation
d. Run the embed Backup software from Windows.
2. In %SYSTEMROOT%, you'll find a batch script called "FullRestore.cmd" that
will restore the C:\ and SYSTEM drive to its initial state.
When starting the computer, if you hit the F11 key at boot, the Recovery tool
from the Recovery partition will start. This will allow you to restore the
computer to its initial state like the option in WinRE (so the Data partition
won't be destroyed, at least for me).
If you're restoring from the USB key or from the DVDs, everything will be
destroyed, INCLUDING the Data partition.
_ __ _
| |/ /_ _ _____ __ ___ _ | |__ _ _ __ _ ___
_| ' <| ' \/ _ \ V V / ' \ | '_ \ || / _` (_-<________________________________
|_|\_\_||_\___/\_/\_/|_||_| |_.__/\_,_\__, /__/ 4. Known Bugs
|___/
There's some minor 'bugs' in that release. I wasn't able to fix them, but
since they're minor, I'm just listing them here in case of someone want to
investigate further.
- Sometime, when restoring the computer to its initial state (i.e. using the
Recovery program from WinRE), the RECOVERY partition (R:\ by default) is
properly hidden but still visible in the "My Computer" icon. The partition
disappear completely after rebooting the computer.
- Sometime, when using the recovery tool from WinRE, the Data partition is
assigned to letter E:\ instead of D:\. This is really minor and the Data
partition can be changed manually after the restoration.
I think I won't try to fix these minor bugs. Up to you if you want to do so.
_ _
| | (_)__ ___ _ _ ___ ___
_| |__| / _/ -_) ' \(_-</ -_)___________________________________________________
|____|_\__\___|_||_/__/\___| 5. License
I wasn't able to find the original license for the AnarethoS package.
That's why I use the GNU GPL 3 license for the whole package.
Please check the "license.txt" file for more details.
___ _ _ _
/ __|_ _ ___ __| (_) |_ ___
_| (__| '_/ -_) _` | | _(_-<___________________________________________________
\___|_| \___\__,_|_|\__/__/ 6. Credits
This package was tested a lot on my HP G62-a57SF laptop.
I hope it'll be useful to you.
Of course, every credits goes to AnarethoS for his nice work.
For the HP F11 BIOS Key, credits goes to Snack, LaptoniC, and the MSFN board.
If you are interested about technical details on the HP F11 BIOS key, check
the 'source' directory.
- SiZiOUS, 2015
www.sizious.com - sizious (at) gmail (d0t) com - fb.com/sizious - @sizious
_____________________________________________________________________| EOF |____