Total W7 Death Help: Error Class 0xc0000225

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  1. Posts : 26
    Windows VII Professional (Sixty Four Bit)
       #1

    Total W7 Death Help: Error Class 0xc0000225


    Good afternoon.

    This is a long, long post, so get ready for a wild ride.

    For fifteen years, I have had a "Windows VII" operating system. It survived multiple updates, transplants, and even upgrade to the "Professional" version. I even got it to boot into an UEFI environment natively. My OS was of a sixty-four bit persuasion. It was a legitimate one, with a legitimate key that is verified as Genuine. No, I do not care that it's outdated, and no, I am not upgrading. My current computer's make and model is a Dell Optiplex 9020 with thirty-two gigabytes of RAM.

    However, recently, I made a fatal mistake on top of a string of cascading errors, and my PC instantly committed suicide.

    In an attempt to create a RAID I Array, I realized that I could use the "Disk Manager" to convert to a Dynamic Disk and mirror accordingly, because the alternative was formatting everything. I did so, and the moment I clicked the button, my computer instantly crashed and has never started up again.


    The problem is that the System Images I have relied on for all these years, which I took daily, have failed. I updated to a four terabyte solid-state drive and had to configure UEFI, which worked, but I discovered too late that the "Windows Back Up and Restore" did not make a System Image, either the night before or when I manually did so. As my configuration deletes the old image to make a new one, it was GONE.

    "No problem," I thought, getting my full W7 installation Original Equipment Manufactuer disc, "I can use the System Restore Points that I took regularly, including a manual one yesterday."

    The installation disc said that no such recovery point existed. I took one the moment I updated to the UEFI.

    I'm getting nervous.

    Thankfully, I have "Disk Genius Professional", so I went in and restored the partition tables. Both the OEM Disc and the "Disk Genuis" boot environment recognized SOMETHING as existing, and say "Windows 7 Professional".
    No dice, because that won't boot.

    Well, there is "Start Up Repair". It told me, each time I ran it, that whatever I tried could not be saved.

    Thankfully, I can use CHKDSK and SFC, right?

    No. CHKDSK fixed nothing. The SFC system is permanently locked out in the W7 ISO because it says I need to reboot it, and rebooting solves nothing. Every command (e.g. the DISM delete pending repairs thing) does not fix it. At one point I got the SFC system to say "Windows Resource Protection could not start the repair service", instead, but that did nothing. I tried it both with things like "/OFFBOOTDIR and "/WINBOOTDIR" and without. (I ran the CKHDSK again, with the "/F" and "/R" qualifiers, and it got to stage four of five, but it froze at twelve percent and has done nothing for the past twenty minutes.)

    I then went through every conceivable step concerning BOOTREC, BCDEDIT, and so on, just in case it was the UEFI system itself that failed. That worked, but it did not fix the OS itself. Through that process, I found that it is NOT the boot system that failed because I have not changed that and the error I was given (Class 0xc0000225) is stated to be the operating system itself being corrupted. (I cannot use the Set Active feature of the DISKPART command because I use the UEFI structure instead of the Master Boot Record.)

    Thankfully, I have a second W7 installation on a hard drive, of the same OS. These systems are identical, so I plug that in and try to copy the files I am told are corrupted, particularly overwriting the WINLOAD.EFI file with the factory version (from the W7 that;s unchanged) that gets an error. I copy the boot files and the WINSXS folder from the working one (making sure to rename the original folders). While that changes the error from "WINLOAD.EFI" failure to Class 0xc0000225, it does not work. I unplug the working OS with nothing else on it and continue.
    I try the DISM suggestions but because my OS is W7, nothing can be done, and the one situation that says it can be done, with the "/ONLINE" qualifier, does not work because I am running from the W7 OEM disc. The W7 version, "/SCANHEALTH", also fails.

    I tried some third-party software called the "Windows Recovery Environment", but it is corrupted and says:
    WELCOME TO YOUR BOX
    /SLITAZ BOOT TIME: 12S.S
    TARTING OPENSSH SERVER: OPENSSH...
    STARTING OPENSSH SERVER: OPENSSH...
    SLITAZ GNU/LINUX KERNEL 2.6.37-SLITAZ TTY1

    I was told to E-Mail them and I am still waiting on that.

    Currently, when I try to boot into the corrupted OS, the error I get is a Class 0xc0000225 Error, with the stipulation that "the boot selection failed because a required device is inaccessible". I assume that is referring to the other hard disk with a working W7 version.
    In the "Disk Genius" software, my corrupted OS has all of its files intact and its file directory can be browsed ,with every file being readable, but that isn't the same as it booting!

    I have been at this for over a week.

    It would be effortless to format and install a clean copy of W7, and I tested it on other hard drives in case I needed to do it. As I have legitimate W7 keys, I don't fear any issues with corporate bureaucracy to activate it. The good news is that my years of pictures, videos, and so on are backed up, but that's not enough.

    The bad news is that I CANNOT afford to lose this version of the OS because of both its configuration (fifteen years of settings) and because of all my games and content that were backed up only on the System Image.
    I was confident in my System Image back ups because I took them daily, and it ran as surely as the sun rose. The one time I needed it most, I didn't have one.

    I am at my wit's end but I have refused to give up for the simple fact that I am disabled and unable to contribute or work, so everything I have ever done or made in my adult life is on that computer.
    Again, I can recover the FILES, but the OPERATING SYSTEM is corrupted. I want to restore the OPERATING SYSTEM. I have all of my files.

    Have mercy on me, and please help me if you can. Thank you in advance for any assistance you may render.
    -TURTLESHROOM


    -----------------------

    Click here for the current error that I am experiencing.
    Last edited by TurtleShroom; 06 Aug 2024 at 22:35.
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 608
    Windows 7 x64 SP1
       #2

    It sounds like the issue is the disconnection of a device. That device might have had boot-related stuff on it, without which the system cannot boot. If this device cannot be identified and reconnected, one possibility would be to rebuild the boot sector.

    I did this once but I can't remember exactly how I did it. but it was more than just a simple boot repair. I think it involved creating a new boot sector on the drive. You might have a look at something like this:

    Just a moment...

    Or this:

    https://www.supergrubdisk.org/rescatux/
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 26
    Windows VII Professional (Sixty Four Bit)
    Thread Starter
       #3

    I will try the Grub Disk. Thank you.

    - - - Updated - - -

    The Grub Disk failed, but I was able to recover enough data that I got a new error talking about my "WINLOAD.EFI" configuration (Class 0xc0000428), which the "Start Up Repair" says is corrupted.

    - - - Updated - - -

    SECOND UPDATE:

    For reasons beyond my understanding, I managed to recover SOMETHING. My error changed from the original one to an error concerning "WINLOAD.EFI", with the Error Class 0xc0000428, as previously stated.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 16,438
    7 X64
       #4

    have you disabled secure boot
      My Computers


  5. Posts : 26
    Windows VII Professional (Sixty Four Bit)
    Thread Starter
       #5

    SIW2 said:
    have you disabled secure boot
    Yes. Secure Boot is disabled.

    - - - Updated - - -

    In an attempt to link everything together, I will also post other places I have asked about this, in hopes that, should the issue be resolved, others can have a more thorough resource to deal with what I dealt.


    - - - Updated - - -

    Click here for the current error that I am experiencing.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 16,438
    7 X64
       #6

    Have you tried replacing it?

    Total W7 Death Help: Error Class 0xc0000225-winload-efi-corrupt.jpg

    - - - Updated - - -

    You could try replacing it with the file in your booted media

    at cmd prompt type

    copy /y x:\windows\system32\winload.efi c:\windows\system32\winload.efi
      My Computers


  7. Posts : 26
    Windows VII Professional (Sixty Four Bit)
    Thread Starter
       #7

    SIW2 said:
    copy /y x:\windows\system32\winload.efi c:\windows\system32\winload.efi
    Thank you for your suggestion! I tried the code, but it sadly did not work. I am still getting the same error.

    - - - Updated - - -

    I identified a second error in the "Start Up Repair" interface that coincided with the "WINLOAD.EFI" error:

    ROOT CAUSE FOUND:
    A RECENT DRIVER INSTALLATION OR UPGRADE MAY BE PREVENTING THE SYSTE, FROM STARTING
    REPAIR ACTION: SYSTEM FILES INTEGRITY CHECK AND REPAIR
    RESULT: FAILED. ERROR CODE = XX3
    TIME TAKEN = 0 MILLISECONDS



    ---

    Furthermore, I cannot run the System File Checker ("SFC /SCANNOW") because it says that I have a system repair pending which requires a reboot to complete. It tells me to restart and try again, but resetting my computer does not work.

    - - - Updated - - -

    I also have four System Restore points, including one that I made manually, that are not recognized or accessible by the Start Up Repair system.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 16,438
    7 X64
       #8

    You can check for shadow copies with this:
    ShadowCopyView - Shadow copy viewer for Windows 10/8/7/Vista

    the shadow copy on your backup disk should contain the previous system image

    It is possible to mount the .vhd file read only while it is still in the shadow copy, but it is more flexible to copy out the entire windowsimagebackup folder from the shadow copy to the root of another disk/partition.
      My Computers


  9. Posts : 26
    Windows VII Professional (Sixty Four Bit)
    Thread Starter
       #9

    SIW2 said:
    You can check for shadow copies with this:
    ShadowCopyView - Shadow copy viewer for Windows 10/8/7/Vista
    the shadow copy on your backup disk should contain the previous system image
    The old System Image was deleted to make room for the new one, but I will definitely check your suggestion tomorrow.

    Will this recover the System Restore Points? Those are what I need.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 16,438
    7 X64
       #10

    Will this recover the System Restore Points?
    Shadow copy is a snaphot image of a partition. The system restore program that comes with windows restores only certain parts of the shadow copy.

    The program I linked you to is not the system restore program that comes with windows. It shows the contents of the shadow copies, any parts of which can be copied out .

    By default when making a system image, the old blocks are moved into shadow storage.

    Alternatively it possible to create a .wim image of a shadow copy, which can be restored.

    Instead of asking endless questions, download the little program and you will see what it does.
      My Computers


 
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