|
|
| Fix windows MBR from linux |
|
|
|
| Written by Bart Dorlandt |
| Tuesday, 12 January 2010 15:20 |
|
I wanted to replace the GRUB with the native windows MBR. But I didn't want to spent time on searching for a windows CD and doing a repair. What to do next? I found this site which guided me through the solution. The solution is ms-sys. Below a copy of the article to keep it save. NOTE: the ms-sys isn't available anymore within Ubuntu. You can use this package from debian instead. Something happen to a windows Master Boot Record (MBR) that you’re responsible for? Want a very quick, very easy way to restore it with nothing but your craft, native intelligence and a liveCD?Be cautious here - you’re working with your disks in a very direct manner. If you don’t have everything backed up or are unsure of anything, you may want to wait until you have a standard Windows CD/DVD. Boot into your Ubuntu LiveCD on the offending machine. Once Ubuntu starts up, go to System -> Administration -> Software Sources and enable (by checking it off) the Universal repository. Now, open a terminal session (Applications -> Accessories -> Terminal) and type the following: sudo apt-get install ms-sys ms-sys is a program used to write Microsoft compatible boot records. Now you’ll need to figure out what partition is the one hosting your Windows operating system. Back in the command line, type: sudo fdisk -l That will list the available partitions. You’re looking for a partition that says something like /dev/sda1 1 9327 74919096 83 NTFS The two important bits are the ‘/dev/sda1‘ which is the partition itself and the ‘NTFS‘ which tells us it’s a Windows formatted partition. So your Windows partition exists on your drive sda and it’s partition 1. The MBR for drive sda (assuming you boot into windows using it’s native boot loader) is what you want to repair. We want to fix the MBR on /dev/sda. To do so, type: sudo ms-sys -m /dev/sda You’ll want to change the ’sda’ bit if your results from ‘fdisk -l‘ are different. If for instance your windows install is on sdb or hda. Once you do that, reboot the machine, removing the LiveCD from the drive and Windows should come back to you. Sure, you could do this by inserting the correct Windows CD and booting into repair mode from it - but I find the Ubuntu way a bit faster and I’m more likely to have an Ubuntu LiveCD on me than a Windows CD.
Set as favorite
Bookmark
Email This
Hits: 601 Trackback(0)
Comments (0)
![]() Write comment - Name & Email obligated
|
| Related items: |
|---|
|




