On Windows Server and earlier versions of the Windows NT family of operating systems, when the computer starts, the Windows boot loader, called "ntldr", reads the Boot. Then, ntldr loads the selected operating system in accordance with settings in the Boot. By default, on NTFS drives, the system , hidden , archived , and read-only attributes are set to protect Boot.
The file attributes do not affect the operation of the boot loader. The following sections briefly describe Boot. This document describes aspects of Boot.
For a complete list of Boot. A file called BOOT. INI stores information regarding the physical location s of your various Windows NT-based installations. NTLDR accesses this file to get a list of the installed operating systems and display them in the on-screen boot menu for the end user to pick and OS to load into. INI file to reflect the correct system information. This section lists the operating systems installed on this physical machine.
Each operating system has a line that describes its location in standard ARC path format. The four boot files for Windows 7 and Vista are: bootmgr: Operating system loader code; similar to ntldr in previous versions of Windows. On Windows 10 the boot. This file is more versatile than boot. Microsoft Windows uses this file as a method of displaying a menu of operating systems currently on the computer allowing the user to select what operating system to load.
The information in boot. The Advanced Boot Options screen lets you start Windows in advanced troubleshooting modes. You can access the menu by turning on your computer and pressing the F8 key before Windows starts. Some options, such as safe mode, start Windows in a limited state, where only the bare essentials are started.
Editing system properties will help enable or disable the Windows Boot Manager. Step 2: Here, type sysdm.
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