Guest PL Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Hi guys How can I repair this file in windows 2003 server???? someone can help me? -- PL
Guest Thee Chicago Wolf Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Re: pci.sys file damaged >Hi guys >How can I repair this file in windows 2003 server???? >someone can help me? Is this server on SP2 already? - Thee Chicago Wolf
Guest PL Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Re: pci.sys file damaged yes, is already "Thee Chicago Wolf" <.@.> wrote in message news:v5trp3hsl3c19qhmuqhn5pnjfsro4r56uk@4ax.com... > >Hi guys >>How can I repair this file in windows 2003 server???? >>someone can help me? > > Is this server on SP2 already? > > - Thee Chicago Wolf
Guest Thee Chicago Wolf Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Re: pci.sys file damaged >yes, is already Well, I guess you could try this: 1. Navigate to C:\Windows\ServicPackFiles\.. and locate pci.sys. 2. Copy it to a new name such as pci.sys.bak 3. Save pci.sys.bak to C:\Window\System32\drivers where the corrupted pci.sys should be residing 4. Boot the Server 2003 CD and go to recovery console in DOS and see if you're able to remove the corrupted pci.sys file and then rename the pci.sys.bak file to pci.sys and then boot. If both pci.sys files from either location (System32\.. or ServicePackFiles\..) are corrupted, it's not going to be an easy fix. WFP should not complain about version mismatch since both files are identical. - Thee Chicago Wolf
Guest PL Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Re: pci.sys file damaged Ok thanks, I'll test it. "Thee Chicago Wolf" <.@.> wrote in message news:j1vrp355iq6ml3k1tkuka5d5n2ookum2oc@4ax.com... > >yes, is already > > Well, I guess you could try this: > > 1. Navigate to C:\Windows\ServicPackFiles\.. and locate pci.sys. > 2. Copy it to a new name such as pci.sys.bak > 3. Save pci.sys.bak to C:\Window\System32\drivers where the corrupted > pci.sys should be residing > 4. Boot the Server 2003 CD and go to recovery console in DOS and see > if you're able to remove the corrupted pci.sys file and then rename > the pci.sys.bak file to pci.sys and then boot. > > If both pci.sys files from either location (System32\.. or > ServicePackFiles\..) are corrupted, it's not going to be an easy fix. > WFP should not complain about version mismatch since both files are > identical. > > - Thee Chicago Wolf
Guest PL Posted January 28, 2008 Posted January 28, 2008 Re: pci.sys file damaged lot of thanks, my hard drive is damaged :( "Thee Chicago Wolf" <.@.> wrote in message news:j1vrp355iq6ml3k1tkuka5d5n2ookum2oc@4ax.com... > >yes, is already > > Well, I guess you could try this: > > 1. Navigate to C:\Windows\ServicPackFiles\.. and locate pci.sys. > 2. Copy it to a new name such as pci.sys.bak > 3. Save pci.sys.bak to C:\Window\System32\drivers where the corrupted > pci.sys should be residing > 4. Boot the Server 2003 CD and go to recovery console in DOS and see > if you're able to remove the corrupted pci.sys file and then rename > the pci.sys.bak file to pci.sys and then boot. > > If both pci.sys files from either location (System32\.. or > ServicePackFiles\..) are corrupted, it's not going to be an easy fix. > WFP should not complain about version mismatch since both files are > identical. > > - Thee Chicago Wolf
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