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Hi All, does dual booting XP and Vista still have problems with both OS's
system restores being wiped out? I would be so much better off if I could dual boot XP and Vista vs using Vista on VM2007 but I don't want my system restore points to be wiped out (that's what I've heard happens). Could someone confirm this or assure me that this doesn't happen anymore? Any thoughts would be SO helpful!! Katy |
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Yes it happens. You can get around it by using (so I'm told) BootitNg which
can hide partitions from each other. or you can use bitlocker to encrypt Vista to make it invisible to XP. M$ say they may (only may) include a fix for this in XP SP3. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "katy" wrote in message ... Hi All, does dual booting XP and Vista still have problems with both OS's system restores being wiped out? I would be so much better off if I could dual boot XP and Vista vs using Vista on VM2007 but I don't want my system restore points to be wiped out (that's what I've heard happens). Could someone confirm this or assure me that this doesn't happen anymore? Any thoughts would be SO helpful!! Katy |
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Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve
some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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See the System Restore team's blog at
http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...14/441829.aspx for the definitive answer. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx. "Peter" wrote in message ... Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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If anyone thinks I'm dismantling my tower every time I boot back and forth,
which is many times daily...well you know what I mean. In other words boo to M$ for screwing up in the first place. I've tried using Vista's Bitlocker to no avail - keeps telling me "not enough room on disk" which is total baloney. But tell me this, how come I did a successful "last known good config" on Vista a while back? I don't want to hide partitions from each other because I quite often look in one from the other etc. M$ should really think about this seriously. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "Jill Zoeller [MSFT]" wrote in message ... See the System Restore team's blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...14/441829.aspx for the definitive answer. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx. "Peter" wrote in message ... Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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It's a screw-up for Vista to have a technology advance over XP? XP doesn't
support the new stuff, and can't interact with it without corrupting it. XP's design decision, correct or not, was to delete what was unavoidably corrupted -- better to remove the shadow copies than leave corrupted ones waiting for you to restore a file from it. There might be possible software workarounds (turn off XP VSS for disks that have Vista shadow copies, perhaps?), but even those have the potential to break things under XP and can't be lightly deployed to everyone in a service pack. I'm not entirely sure that would work in the first place. Believe me, Microsoft *does* think about this seriously -- it's not a simple thing to do "the right thing" for every situation in one update to XP. The right thing for one situation probably breaks two or three others. If you need to, have three partitions: XP system, Vista system, and data. Hide the Vista system from XP so your System Restore shadow copies are intact, then don't rely on persistent shadow copies of your data partition. Then all your data is accessible from both sides. "Peter" wrote in message ... If anyone thinks I'm dismantling my tower every time I boot back and forth, which is many times daily...well you know what I mean. In other words boo to M$ for screwing up in the first place. I've tried using Vista's Bitlocker to no avail - keeps telling me "not enough room on disk" which is total baloney. But tell me this, how come I did a successful "last known good config" on Vista a while back? I don't want to hide partitions from each other because I quite often look in one from the other etc. M$ should really think about this seriously. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "Jill Zoeller [MSFT]" wrote in message ... See the System Restore team's blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...14/441829.aspx for the definitive answer. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx. "Peter" wrote in message ... Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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Michael,
I'm sorry I wasn't trying to belittle Microsoft here. Yes I know they treat this seriously. I know I could, for instance, use Bootit NG to hide Vista from XP but that would mess up my bootloader that I currently use and like, plus have the added disadvantage of my not being able to access Vista from XP and v.v. The last message I got from Microsoft said it was being looked at but may never be solved. I'll just grin and bear it, and should Vista screw up, I'll just format/reinstall. I'm still mystified how Vista found a "last known good configuration". Thanks for the input. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate fully updated P4 D865GBFL HT @ 3.0ghz 4.0gb DDR 700gb HD Sapphire Radeon X1650 Pro Graphics Creative Soundblaster Audigy 4 Audio "Michael A. Bishop (MSFT" wrote in message ... It's a screw-up for Vista to have a technology advance over XP? XP doesn't support the new stuff, and can't interact with it without corrupting it. XP's design decision, correct or not, was to delete what was unavoidably corrupted -- better to remove the shadow copies than leave corrupted ones waiting for you to restore a file from it. There might be possible software workarounds (turn off XP VSS for disks that have Vista shadow copies, perhaps?), but even those have the potential to break things under XP and can't be lightly deployed to everyone in a service pack. I'm not entirely sure that would work in the first place. Believe me, Microsoft *does* think about this seriously -- it's not a simple thing to do "the right thing" for every situation in one update to XP. The right thing for one situation probably breaks two or three others. If you need to, have three partitions: XP system, Vista system, and data. Hide the Vista system from XP so your System Restore shadow copies are intact, then don't rely on persistent shadow copies of your data partition. Then all your data is accessible from both sides. "Peter" wrote in message ... If anyone thinks I'm dismantling my tower every time I boot back and forth, which is many times daily...well you know what I mean. In other words boo to M$ for screwing up in the first place. I've tried using Vista's Bitlocker to no avail - keeps telling me "not enough room on disk" which is total baloney. But tell me this, how come I did a successful "last known good config" on Vista a while back? I don't want to hide partitions from each other because I quite often look in one from the other etc. M$ should really think about this seriously. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "Jill Zoeller [MSFT]" wrote in message ... See the System Restore team's blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...14/441829.aspx for the definitive answer. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx. "Peter" wrote in message ... Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |
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For those following along, this article shows the two known ways of working
around the issue: http://vistasupport.mvps.org/prevent...windows_xp.htm (The first is using BitLocker, and the second is hiding the partition--using TweakUI or gpedit.msc--that Michael mentioned below.) Further reference: http://bertk.mvps.org/html/dualboot.html Three questions: 1) Does hiding the Vista partition from XP definitely work? I've seen a couple "doesn't work for me" type comments, so I'm wondering. 2) If you don't do #1, why wouldn't disabling the Volume Shadow Copy service in XP work? I really don't know of any side-effects of doing this beyond backup, so with the service disabled how could it still be affecting Vista or anything else? 3) Re the Advisory link below, WHAT bootable third-party tools cause the problem? Literally ALL that don't use PE/Vista to boot or just certain ones? I'm assuming one exception for sure would be low-level tools, like those from your disk vendor or Spinrite. Advisory: http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...re-points.aspx "Michael A. Bishop (MSFT" wrote in message ... It's a screw-up for Vista to have a technology advance over XP? XP doesn't support the new stuff, and can't interact with it without corrupting it. XP's design decision, correct or not, was to delete what was unavoidably corrupted -- better to remove the shadow copies than leave corrupted ones waiting for you to restore a file from it. There might be possible software workarounds (turn off XP VSS for disks that have Vista shadow copies, perhaps?), but even those have the potential to break things under XP and can't be lightly deployed to everyone in a service pack. I'm not entirely sure that would work in the first place. Believe me, Microsoft *does* think about this seriously -- it's not a simple thing to do "the right thing" for every situation in one update to XP. The right thing for one situation probably breaks two or three others. If you need to, have three partitions: XP system, Vista system, and data. Hide the Vista system from XP so your System Restore shadow copies are intact, then don't rely on persistent shadow copies of your data partition. Then all your data is accessible from both sides. "Peter" wrote in message ... If anyone thinks I'm dismantling my tower every time I boot back and forth, which is many times daily...well you know what I mean. In other words boo to M$ for screwing up in the first place. I've tried using Vista's Bitlocker to no avail - keeps telling me "not enough room on disk" which is total baloney. But tell me this, how come I did a successful "last known good config" on Vista a while back? I don't want to hide partitions from each other because I quite often look in one from the other etc. M$ should really think about this seriously. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "Jill Zoeller [MSFT]" wrote in message ... See the System Restore team's blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/arc...14/441829.aspx for the definitive answer. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. Want to learn more about Windows file and storage technologies? Visit our team blog at http://blogs.technet.com/filecab/default.aspx. "Peter" wrote in message ... Microsoft told me that it may be XP SP3 that solves it but it would involve some very costloy rewriting of code and may never be solved.. All my restore points remain in XP and all but the last one in Vista. Vista should not be affecting your XP restore points at all, it's the other way round, XP doesn't like Vista's. In other words I can do a "last known good configuration" boot in Vista but not a proper system restore. -- Peter Toronto, Canada XP Pro SP2 x 2 + Vista Ultimate P4 HT @ 3.00ghz, 4.0gb RAM, 700gb HDD "satorisama" wrote in message ... Actually, it is (normally) not the case that both restore points are removed. Usually what happons is when you boot to Vista, it deletes the XP restore point and vice versa. I get many issues concerning Vista/XP dualboot systems and system restore, and the easiest solution seems to just disable the system restore option on the OS that is least used. I know it's a sucky solution but for now it seems to be the only one there is. Let's hope that SP1 for Vista resolves many of the issues known so far. Minamoto Satori (MSPSS) -- satorisama |