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XP SP2 with SATA install loops during install it reboots but back to start of install Rate Topic: -----

#1 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 04 August 2009 - 11:19 AM

Hi
I'm trying to move my hard drive setup (XP with SP2) to a new machine that has a SATA drive and a tablet. It's a Fujitsu T4220. To that end I ghosted my existing drive, with >100gb of programs to the new hd, then I'm creating a slipstream to reinstall XP tablet over the existing XP install on the ghosted disk.

I created a simple slipstream with only the add'l SATA drivers and XP tablet edition. I also embedded the key from XP tablet in the slipstream. My problem is that it reads the slipstream, installs the textmode drivers, copies install files to a folder, then reboots. The reboots starts the whole process over.

Any ideas on what or how many things I'm doing wrong?

BTW, I read thru 8 sheets of posts and saw that many problems can be related to multiple nlite files so I started a new one each time.


#2 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 04 August 2009 - 12:51 PM

Breezy, did you see any error messages? You see nothing of the GUI mode? Please attach (not paste) your Last Session.ini. Make sure to always start with a fresh copy of your CD files/folders, do all your work in one nLite session and integrate only one SP. Please report when you have a solution, so others can benefit. Enjoy, John.

#3 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 04 August 2009 - 03:11 PM

Here's the last one I tried. I've been trying out a variety of options, especially with the unattended settings, to no avail. I wouldn't get an error message. It would just text that Windows was restarting, like it's a normal part of the install.

It seems the issue is that the SATA drivers would only work while the system was running from the install CD. After the restart it couldn't find the hard drive and asked me to touch a key to boot from the CD.

I'm going thru all this just to keep from having to reload all my stuff from many years. I did this very thing for my last few PCs except that I had a real XP install CD and the disk drivers were always IDE drives. This time though I have the XP tablet edition (no real CD for that apparently) and I'm using a SATA drive.

Oh that Windows was actually made to update, like Macs seem to be. All program files in a single folder .. reminds me of the simplicity of the DOS days .. sigh

Attached File(s)



#4 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 04 August 2009 - 03:36 PM

Breezy, gotta run, but please post the link to your text mode drivers and try ComputerType = Automatic. Catch you later this evening. Enjoy, John.

#5 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 04 August 2009 - 08:40 PM

John
Thanks for chiming in to help. I did try the automatic computer setting with no change. Also, the drivers I used are the same ones in this article ..
http://www.msfn.org/...howtopic=107504
I used ..
32bit_Intel_textmode_driver_v8.9.0.1023_WHQL(2).zip and
Intel_INF_Drivers_9111014_ready_for_nLite.rar

The problem seems to be that the install copies files to an install folder then starts to reboot, and then cannot boot the hard drive so it reverts back to the CD boot and the install starts all over again. Any thoughts?

#6 User is offline   Ponch 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 02:26 AM

What exactly do you choose in the menus, as I understand you dont modify nor format any partition.
Having the message "press any key to boot from cd" means it does see the HDD so I don't think it is a driver problem.

#7 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 06:37 AM

I see a choice of partition to install to, and then a choice to format partitions, which I don't do, and I choose to install to the partition with Windows already installed. The last time I tried it actually came up and warned me about installing over Windows and how it can cause problems. That was the first ite I got that however. I'm going to try the repair option in nlite and see what that gives me next.

View PostPonch, on Aug 5 2009, 04:26 AM, said:

What exactly do you choose in the menus, as I understand you dont modify nor format any partition.
Having the message "press any key to boot from cd" means it does see the HDD so I don't think it is a driver problem.


#8 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 09:22 AM

Breezy, you must choose Prompt Repair in Unattended Mode to use the Repair option. If one of your previous tries started at all into install, then your old installed Windows is gone and Repair will not work, I suspect. I would like to see a link to the manufacturer's site for the computer (main board, if home build) driver download. Is your SATA drive set to AHCI mode in the BIOS? Enjoy, John.

#9 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:04 PM

View Postjohnhc, on Aug 5 2009, 11:22 AM, said:

Breezy, you must choose Prompt Repair in Unattended Mode to use the Repair option. If one of your previous tries started at all into install, then your old installed Windows is gone and Repair will not work, I suspect. I would like to see a link to the manufacturer's site for the computer (main board, if home build) driver download. Is your SATA drive set to AHCI mode in the BIOS? Enjoy, John.


It seems that repair only gives me a dos prompt on the drive. It doesn't repair anything. Is this the way it's supposed to be? Also most of the folders, except for "windows" are "access denied".

#10 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:09 PM

OK. It seems that if I skip the first repair option and choose to install Windows it will give me a choice to repair my existing Windows install. We'll see how that works ..

#11 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:20 PM

Breezy, there is a long discussion about what 'Repair' means. If you are interested, then do a search on it here. What you got is the Recovery Console, so that you could "repair" your Windows. You did not get the Repair Reinstall. Which you may get when you skip the first one. What you got is normal. Please let us know what you learn. You did not answer my last reply. Enjoy, John.

#12 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:43 PM

OK. It ran the full install BUT it still won't boot from the C drive. Now I THINK my problem is that I ghosted an IDE drive image to the SATA drive. Looking into that now ..

#13 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:52 PM

I used a program called EZ Gig 2 to ghost my drive images and I was able to actually get someone on the phone about it. He said IDE to SATA is fine BUT .. before ghosting I HAVE to UNINSTALL (not just turn it off) my antivirus software or else my new SATA drive won't boot. BTW, I use AVG but it doesn't matter .. according to these guys any AV program will have to be uninstalled. Does that sound right to you guys?

#14 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 12:57 PM

John
Sorry I didn't reply .. I've been posting but I guess I missed your question which was ". Is your SATA drive set to AHCI mode in the BIOS?"

The answer is yes, it is set to AHCI. What about the AV program needing to be removed to successfully ghost a drive? Have you heard of that before? BTW in my research Norton Ghost DID have problems ghosting from IDE to SATA, though I guess in later versions they fixed it ..

#15 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 01:04 PM

Breezy, sorry, I know nothing about GHOST and am not a Norton fan. I have also not heard about needing to remove your AV. Try Safe Mode (F8 during boot). If it works, you can go to Add/Remove and remove AVG. Please let us know, and for your info, you can EDIT your post and add stuff to it. Enjoy, john.

#16 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 05 August 2009 - 08:16 PM

It appears that here is my problem ..
http://techrepublic.com.com/5208-11184-0.h...ssageID=1970904

Apparently others have run into this when cloning an IDE drive to a SATA drive. Seems the SATA drivers are not in place before the cloning and so the drive is structured as an IDE layout during the clone process. Even reinstalling Windows with a slipstream that has SATA drivers doesn't seem to work.

It seems that the most common way to do this is to install the drivers using F6 key at the beginning. I have no floppy though, only a DVD drive. My cloning software suggests loading the SATA drivers in Windows BEFORE I clone the IDE drive. It offers no advice on how to do this however. How could I possibly install SATA drivers without the requisite chipset, etc? And with a laptop I only have 1 drive choice. How messed up this is.

This is a big problem and I can imagine that lots of people will be running into this as SATA drives become even more established.

Do you have any other ideas?

I will be trying to install the SATA drivers before cloning, like this article explains ..
http://www.acronis.com/company/inpress/200...-trueimage.html

This post has been edited by Breezy: 05 August 2009 - 09:47 PM


#17 User is offline   johnhc 

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Posted 06 August 2009 - 08:34 AM

Breezy, yours is the first I have heard of IDE to SATA problem. Since I am unknowledgeable of Ghosting, I am at a loss to suggest anything. Fernando 1 is the driver expert around here and hopefully he will comment. You might consider PMing him if you don't hear or have success soon. Good luck, John.

#18 User is offline   Fernando 1 

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Posted 07 August 2009 - 06:03 AM

@ Breezy:
Questions:
1. Are you sure, that the SATA hdd of your Fujitsu-Siemens LIFEBOOK T4220 is running in AHCI Mode?
2. If yes, does it have the BIOS option to disable the AHCI Mode?
3. Which of the listed Intel SATA Controller(s) have you enabled while integrating the Intel textmode driver?
4. Why do you want to install XP ontop of an older and probably not AHCI supporting XP installation?
5. Which error message did you see, when you get the reboot loop? (Tip: You will get the entire error message, if you hit F8 while rebooting and choose the advanced option "Don't reboot at system failure".)

This post has been edited by Fernando 1: 07 August 2009 - 06:20 AM


#19 User is offline   Breezy 

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Posted 07 August 2009 - 06:37 AM

View PostFernando 1, on Aug 7 2009, 08:03 AM, said:

@ Breezy:
Questions:
1. Are you sure, that the SATA hdd of your Fujitsu-Siemens LIFEBOOK T4220 is running in AHCI Mode?
2. If yes, does it have the BIOS option to disable the AHCI Mode?
3. Which of the listed Intel SATA Controller(s) have you enabled while integrating the Intel textmode driver?
4. Why do you want to install XP ontop of an older and probably not AHCI supporting XP installation?
5. Which error message did you see, when you get the reboot loop? (Tip: You will get the entire error message, if you hit F8 while rebooting and choose the advanced option "Don't reboot at system failure".)


Thanks for chiming in Fernando

running in AHCI mode
there is a bios option for disabling AHCI. Trying it has not helped.
I enabled all of them.
I want to install XP tablet over XP Pro because I have 8 years of software installs, etc that I do not want to rebuild from the ground up
The looping is pretty much over now. What was happening was that it was constantly rebooting from from the DVD even though it found and installed XP Tablet to a hard drive.

I am now of the belief that my BlacX SATA USB drive might not be working correctly. It turns out that after a ghosting I have a LOT of drive errors. I'm just finding that out. Runing chkdsk it checks out OK, but if run chkdsk /p it reports errors, and now it's taking forever
to run chkdsk /r. BTW the original drive was chkdsk'ed before the ghosting just to make sure it was clean.

#20 User is offline   Fernando 1 

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Posted 07 August 2009 - 07:30 AM

View PostBreezy, on Aug 7 2009, 02:37 PM, said:

I want to install XP tablet over XP Pro because I have 8 years of software installs, etc that I do not want to rebuild from the ground up
Any change of the hardware system is a good opportunity to do a fresh and clean OS install. This way you will get the best possible performance and 100% appropriate drivers.
The time you are losing by reinstalling your prefered software and tools is much less than the time you will lose within the next years by sticking with an old and fragmented registry. Furthermore you will be able to select more actual and maybe better driver and software versions than those you have used for the last 8 years.

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