Grubinst Gui

软件评论 ad.回合制游戏 石器时代私服 儿时的经典网游,你还记得吗?. 2009-04-19: Updated the attachement with a new version that loads grubinst.exe from the directory where grubinstgui.exe is located instead of the current directory. Well, the grubinstgui wasn't what I would call a 'good fit' at this point - therefore I developed a replacement that perfectly fits at this point: 1. What is grubinstgui.exe? Grubinstgui.exe is usually located in the 'C: Brother Desktop grub4dos ' folder. None of the anti-virus scanners at VirusTotal reports anything malicious about grubinstgui.exe. If you have additional information about the file, please share it with the FreeFixer users by posting a comment at the bottom of this page. The file GRUBINSTGUI.EXE was first observed on Jan 17 2018 and last seen on Jan 17 2018. It has been submitted for analysis from the following geographical locations. Unique Filenames.

Bootable media builder of Acronis True Image and Acronis Disk Director cannot create multiproduct bootable media. Our development is working on implementing this feature. As workaround you can use grub4dos.

Grubinst Gui

This solution will work for BIOS machines only. The media will boot in BIOS/Legacy BIOS/CSM mode and will not work if your computer is using UEFI.

How to check whether your computer is using BIOS or UEFI:

In Windows 8/8.1/10: Start -> Search -> msinfo32.exe
If your computer is using BIOS, you will see BIOS Mode: Legacy. This solution will work on your machine.
If your computer is using UEFI, you will see BIOS Mode: UEFI. This solution will not work on your machine.

In Windows 7 or earlier:

  1. Open Windows Explorer.
  2. Navigate to C:WindowsPanther
  3. Find setupact.log.
  4. Right-click the file, select Open.
  5. Search for Detected Boot Environment.
    If your computer is using BIOS, you will see: Callback_BootEnvironmentDetect: Detected boot environment: BIOS. This solution will work on your machine.
    If your computer is using UEFI, you will see: Callback_BootEnvironmentDetect: Detected boot environment: UEFI. This solution will not work on your machine.

Downloading grub4dos

Download grub4dos utility and grub installer to your computer and unpack them.
Currently, the latest version of grub4dos is grub4dos-0.4.4.zip and the latest version of grub installer is grubinst-1.1-src-2008-01-01.zip.

Making USB bootable

1. In Windows Explorer, open the installer's folder and select grubinst_gui.exe:

2. Run the application:
Windows XP: Double-click grubinst_gui.exe
Windows 7 or later: Right-click grubinst_gui.exe and select Run as administrator:

3. Select Disk, then click Refresh and select the drive you want to create a bootable media on:
You can detect your drive by its size. In this example an 8GB flash drive is used.

3. In Part List click Refresh.

4. From the dropdown box select Whole disk (MBR):

5. Check the Don't search floppy option, leave all the other options unchecked:

6. Click Install.
If the installation completes successfully, you will see this message:

7. Press Enter.

Grubinst Gui

8. In Windows Explorer open the grub4dos folder, locate grldr and copy it to the target drive:

Creating ISO files of Acronis products

  1. Run the media builder of Acronis True Image.
  2. Select ISO file when offered to choose media destination:
  3. Create the ISO. You can save the ISO file directly to your flash drive or copy in later.
  4. Run the media builder of Acronis Disk Director.
  5. Select ISO file when offered to choose media destination:
  6. Create the ISO. You can save the ISO file directly to your flash drive or copy in later.

Setting up multiproduct boot

  1. Copy the ISO files to the flash drive if you haven't done it yet. Now you should have 3 files on the drive:
  2. Open Notepad.
  3. Insert this content:
    timeout 10
    default 0
    title Acronis Disk Director
    map --mem --heads=0 --sectors-per-track=0 (hd0,0)/<DiskDirector>.iso (hd32)
    map --hook
    chainloader (hd32)
    boot
    title Acronis True Image
    map --mem --heads=0 --sectors-per-track=0 (hd0,0)/<TrueImage>.iso (hd32)
    map --hook
    chainloader (hd32)
    boot
    title CommandLine
    commandline
    title Reboot
    reboot
    title Halt
    halt

where <DiskDirector> is the name of the ISO file created in Acronis Disk Director and <TrueImage> is the ISO file created with Acronis True Image.

4. Save the file as menu.lst to the root directory of your flash drive. In Save as type select All files, otherwise the file might be saved as a .txt-file while we need a .lst-file.

You can double-check the file extention in Windows Explorer:
If you don't see the extention, check this article for help.

Now your USB drive is ready and you can boot your computer with it.

Bootable Pen Drive with Grub4DOS, FreeDOS and ISO Images (e.g. UBCD)

In this post I’ll show you a really neat pen drive installation. A bootable pen drive with FreeDOS installed (no images used) and Grub4DOS to load any ISO image you want.

Grubinst

Start with formatting the USB-Stick using FAT32. The first thing to care about now is Grub4DOS.

You’ll need the latest version of Grub4DOS and the Installer:

Grubinst_gui Grub4dos.zip

Now extract them and start grubinst_gui.exe as administrator.

Select Disk, click on Refresh and then select your pen drive.

Click on Refresh at Part List and then select Whole disk (MBR).

If you get an error message complaining about an invalid partition table, just put -skip-mbr-test in the Extra field.

Select Don't search floppy and leave the rest as it is, then click on Install.

Now you should get this message:

Next up, copy the file grldr (NOT grldr.mbr) onto the pen drive and create a new file called menu.lst.

This is the first part. It defines the color of the menu, the default menu selection and the time after which the default menu selection is executed.

Now we’ll add something to boot CD ISO images, in this case, Ultimate Boot CD. (You can add any Image you want, such as Linux live distributions or Windows DVDs , just create a menu entry for every iso)

You have to copy the ubcd511.iso in the root directory of your pen drive. You can also create a folder called “Images” and put it in there. Just make sure you set the appropriate path to the file.

Now let’s set up FreeDOS.

Download fdbasecd.iso from http://www.freedos.org/freedos/files/.

Grubinst_gui

Extract or mount it and copy the folder ODIN from FREEDOSSETUP onto the pen drive and copy COMMAND.COM from the ODIN folder into the root of the device.

The last step is to add the following to your menu.lst to boot FreeDOS:

If you want you can also add the following lines at the end, they should be self explanatory.

Congratulations, your done. Now you can try it. It should look like this:

Grubinst_gui.exe Free Download

Update 2013-06-23:

I don’t know why but it is possible that you’ll get this error message when you boot FreeDOS:

It seems like FreeDOS is searching for the command.com file in the root directory. Anyway, all you have to do is enter the full path: /ODIN/command.com /P /E:256

&nbKsp;

Grubinst Gui

Here are several links that helped me to work things out:

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