New
#31
Bill,
No go!
The parameter is incorrect. (0x80070057)
Is there anyway to read the recovery file to see what it expects?
--
Nick
Bill,
No go!
The parameter is incorrect. (0x80070057)
Is there anyway to read the recovery file to see what it expects?
--
Nick
Sorry to hear that Nick,
Back to square 1 - 0x80070057 states there is a problem with the System Reserve - that's what we tried to get around by deleting the partitions on the disk.
The restore should have created the partitions as they were in the image.
There are two possibilities in my mind
1) The disk has issues.
Do you have access to another PC where you can create a utility disk. I think Partition Wizard might come in handy. It's small enough to fit on a CD
If not, you can boot to the install disk again and use diskpart to create and format a single partition on Disk 0, then use Chkdisk to test for faults.
2) The image has issues.
Do you have an older image?
Yes there is a way to look at the image - I'm not familiar with it, but there is a tutorial about extracting files. I'll take a look at that and see what can be used to see the layout - probably in an xml file.
I was also thinking it might be easiest to Clean install Win10. At least that way, you would have a working Windows and could stop booting to the install USB.
To do that, I recommend getting a fresh ISO - also requires another PC to download and create the USB
If you don't have another PC to use, the USB you have will have to do.
Think about those things while I go look for the tutorial on looking at the Image backup.
If you want to get a head start, I'd like to see what Disk 0 looks like now after the restore attempt
Boot to install USB
Shift+F10 at first screen
diskpart
sel dis 0
lis dis
lis par
lis vol
** grab the information before closing Command
exit
exit
Close install (X in upper right)
You were kind enough to type the last information gathering.
To save keystrokes, all I need to see is the actual data.
Something like this should suffice:
I only need Disk 0 size and Free space
Disk 0 596 GB 596 GB
For partitions:
Partition 1 Primary 580 GB 31 KB
Partition 2 Recovery 450 MB 580 GB
for volumes:
Vol 3 Ltr C 580 GB
Vol 4 Ltr H 450 MB
Of course there might not be any partitions or volumes - won't know until you look.
Bill
Bill,
Something is strange. Here is info.
Disk:
Disk 0 596 GB 15 GB
Partitions:
Partition 1 Primary 580 GB 31 KB
Partition 2 Recovery 450 MB 580 GB
Volumes:
Vol 3 Ltr C RAW 580 GB
Vol 4 Ltr H NTSF 450 MB
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Nick
Perhaps .... but if the image restore got so far and then threw the error, that would account for the same layout. Don't know for certain.
Do you recall when you last tried the restore (deleting the partitions) if the list par and lis vol showed the same or if the list did not show any partitions on disk 0?
There's one one thing you could try - I asked you to delete the partitions last time. I wonder if the disk was unallocated if that would help get past this error.
You would boot to the install USB
Shift+F10
Since there are drive letters, you should check the partitions for errors
This will take some time to run
chkdsk c: /r
chkdsk h: /r
Then
diskpartNext
sel dis 0
clean
lis par
(there should not be anything on that disk now)
exit
exit
Select Repair
- drill down to Restore System image
Here's a tutorial on System image restore - for reference (works the same in Win10)
System Image Recovery - Restore Image on Computer in Windows 8
Steps 6 - 9 is what I was talking about when I asked if there were other images you could choose
Step 8 is where you might be able to specify reformat - which is what I alluded to in a previous restore image attempt.
The Note box explains what I said might be able to
Step 11 can tell you the layout in the image
Here's the Tutorial about extracting files from an image. I think it might come in handy to get the eMail backup once you get a working Windows on that disk - either an Image restore or a Clean install.
System Image - Extract Files Using Disk Management
Here's a tutorial on a Clean install
Windows 10 - Clean Install - Windows 10 Forums
There are a few key points
1) Disconnect all external devices
2) have only Disk 0 and the install media available
(I don't know if the HP Pavilion disk is internal or external - you probably told me, but I'd have to go look.
If it is internal - disconnect the sata cable before installing)
3) Clean Disk 0 (see above diskpart clean) before the install
4) You've already upgraded to Win10 - when teh install asks for a key - press skip or next.
You don't have a key to enter ... The original upgrade created a Digital License on the MS activation server(s)
I'll leave it up to you how many times you want to try the Image Restore or just do a Clean install.
You're really doing great.
Last edited by Slartybart; 04 Jul 2016 at 13:32. Reason: put links to tuts in sections
Bill,
Am I to understand, or am I deluded in my wishful thinking that I can manually restore my hard drive by accessing the .vhdx file?
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Nick
That I do not know - I try a lot of things and I read a lot and sometimes it all gets blurry.
I think you could manually restore the hard drive, but I don't know the procedure. There are just some things I do not know
When in doubt I fall back to known methods. You've tried the Restore System image a few times and have been met with errors.
I've tried to compensate for the errors but the error persists
To be honest - I would do a Clean install on Disk 0 and move forward from there.
It would be easier for you to investigate the issue on a working Windows.
If a resolution can be found - the image will overlay the Clean install - no need to muck about in the image VHD
If a resolution cannot be found (bad image?) then you'll have to reinstall your apps and use another source for your backups.
Before deciding anything - did you do anything in post# 34?
If the disk is bad (chkdsk) then we;re just spinning wheels.
Hi,
Can you restore a backup to a RAW partition ??
Also, is there any need to run chkdsk if you're going to run a "clean" command anyway ?
Just wondering, that's all.
Cheers,
I believe you can.
Nick has tried the restore a few ways
- as the disk existed
- deleting the partitions
I don't think the restore on a clean disk has been attempted, I'm wondering if the MBR is fubar
The next attempt might be to manually recreate the 580 GB partition and the 450 MB partition.
This would answer the question about a raw or unallocated disk - the format partition option in the restore operation should have done that for Nick though .... I think.
Yes, chkdsk will tell us if there is an issue with the physical disk. A Clean install only writes to the disk. If the disk does have faults, those faults would still exist. Filesystem inconsistencies would be fixed, but not bad spots.
Hi,
Could indeed be the MBR.
Still, I'm wondering if the backup itself is healthy. Was that verified by TS ?
Cheers,