

- Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip install#
- Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip password#
- Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip windows#
You can find the one that belongs to your E2B drive by running CMD->diskpart->list disk. You need to select the "physicaldrive" from a list. The key choices are using "SCSI type" (using "SATA type" throws an error at the end of the process, and I've not tested "IDE type") *and* using a Physical disk instead of creating a virtual drive. Under Hardware tab, click Add and select New HDD. Start VMware, select your VM of choice and open its settings window.ģ. Connect your E2B drive to USB 3.0 port on host computer.ģ. Sidenote: this is the only "VMware" service that needs to be running unless you require network access from your installed guest OSes or being able to run your VMs from a remote computer (o_0).Ģ. Ensure that VMware USB Arbitration service is running. What they don't say is that USB storage connected to USB 3.0 ports are supported only for certain USB 3.0 controllers (my Etron is not one of them).Īnyway I've found a way to get both BIOS and UEFI USB 3.0 boot support, read *and* write on VMwareWks11 by applying the same approach as VMUSBBoot does for VBox.ġ. Well WMwareWks offers native USB 3.0 boot support in *UEFI* mode, by powering the VM up to firmware and choosing boot device accordingly. However according to your articles there was the USB boot limited support (read only via Plop, USB 2.0 boot speed because of no Plop xHCI driver).
Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip windows#
I've been using VBox+VMUSBBoot for my E2B tests, but had to try VMware because it supports UEFI boot to Windows OSes. Found partitions hidden in the conventional way could also be listed, and offered to unhide as well.Īs for VMwareWks11 (I've not tested previous versions) + E2B removable USB drive. Regarding this True Hide feature you are working on, I would like to suggest the following implementation on a future E2B update: a menu option under \_ISO\UTILITIES folder that would scan detected physical storage devices connected to system for True Hidden partitions, which would be listed, and then the user would be allowed to choose which one(s) to unhide (if any). Partition Map Type: MBR (Master Boot Record) My system is WinXp SP3 32 bits and I dont have my usb pen here to lsusb it and give you the details but i do have one exactly the same model (with some company data): I have the same suspicion as you - the usb drive might be somehow corrupted.
Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip install#
When i run the Make_E2B_USB_Drive.cmd i do pick FAT32 (the iso i want to install is 700mb) but it fails on grubinst with the error mentioned above. Ill test the usb drive as soon as i get home. So my question is, can I replace the main menu with my "password menu" and automatically populate a submenu the way the current main menu is done? I know this is low tech and not super secure, but it accomplishes the goal - and usually gets my toolkit returned to me.
Grub4dos Installer 1.1 Zip password#
Assuming the password is "1234", you'd have to press 1 to get to the next menu, then at the next menu, you'd have to press 2 to get to the 3rd menu (otherwise you go back to the first menu), etc. set to the same color as the background image. The point of this is (when I accidentally leave my flash drive behind) to scare low-tech users and prevent them from using it (as well as to get them to call me and return my flash drive.) On other USB toolkits, I've used a "DANGER" background bitmap with embedded text that says, "Please Return This To." I configured the menu to be very small/narrow with all the menu text/borders/highlights/shadows/selection/etc. I want to heavily customize the menu system so that the main menu is a preliminary menu that requires a password before it will go to the actual main menu - otherwise it boots to the default hard drive. "Mounting from cd9660:/dev/iso9660/PCBSD_INSTALL failed with error 19."Ĭould you help me with some of these please? "(initramfs) Unable to find a medium containing a live system" "mountroot: waiting for device /dev/iso9660/FreeNAS_INSTALL"

"Mounting from ufs:/dev/ufs/FreeBSD_Install failed with error 19." I ran the the make continuous script after any change. I also tried convertign all non functional images to imgPTN Files, but that only led to even more errors. Hello I installed 8 different images on an Easy2Boot USB-Drive.īut only two of these actually are working, all the others get stuck during the boot process.
