Repair Install

Bootz

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Hello,

This is pertaining to windows xp but i thought i would ask here anyway.

I have a Dell Optiplex gx260 with windows xp home that locks up at the splash screen everytime i try to boot. When i try to boot into safe mode it locks up at the same file. The file starts with agp so i was thinking video file corrupt maybe?

Anyways i first tryed "last known good config" after safemode didnt work for me, that was also a no go. I then went ahead with a repair install with the oem disk the computer came with.

Boot from disk, enter (set up xp), f8 (agree to terms), then hit R to repair on the selected partion. It then tells me to hit "enter" again to upgrade? (i thought i was repairing?). I hit enter and let it do its thing, at the end it says completed successully. It reboots and i get the same problem.

I should also mention i ran the dell diagostics cd that came with it and it passed all tests.

Is there something im doing wrong?

Or does anyone have any ideas? mbr maybe?
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Build
OS
Vista Business x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II x3 720be @3.15ghz
Motherboard
Asus M4A77D
Memory
2x2GB A-Data DDR2 pc6400
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia EVGA 8800gts (640MB,320bit)
Sound Card
Creative Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 226bw
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Seagate 320gig, WD 80gig
PSU
Rosewill 500watt
Case
Dynex
Cooling
Thermaltake V1
Keyboard
G15
Mouse
Razor DeathAdder
Internet Speed
10.0Mb/896Kb
Instead of safe mode try the "Enable VGA Mode" that is in the same F8 menu. If its your graphics driver that is crashing your system this will load just the basic windows driver. Then if you get in you can re-install or repair your graphics driver and try a normal boot. Your procedure for doing the windows repair sounds correct. I've only ever done it once or twice and its been a while, but I don't remember seeing an upgrade message. I'd have to look at a good online tutorial though to confirm it. One thing I do remember is if it was successful all your installed programs should still be there and you'll be looking at doing windows update again, so there should be a big, long list of updates pending. 80+ I think even if you have SP3 applied.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 10 Education 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X4 980 Black Edition Deneb 3.7GHz
Motherboard
Asus M4N68T-M V2 µATX Motherboard
Memory
8GB 4GBx2 Kingston PC10600 DDR3 1333 Memory
Graphics Card(s)
Zotac NVIDIA Geforce GT640 2 Gig DDR3 PCIe
Sound Card
VIA VT1708s High Definition Audio 8-channel Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LG E2242 1080p and 2 19" I-INC AG191D
Screen Resolution
1280x1024 - 1920x1080 - 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Crucial M100 256 GB SSD and 500 GB WD Blue SATA
PSU
Thermaltake TR 620
Case
Power Up Black ATX Mid-Tower Case
Cooling
Stock heatsink and fan
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless K350 Wave
Mouse
Logitech Wireless M570 Trackman Wheel
Internet Speed
80 Mbps Down 30 Mbps Up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
HP DVD1040e Lightscribe - External USB2
Thank you for the response.

Before when i tryed to boot normaly, it would lock up about 5 seconds or so into the splash screen. I just tryed the VGA mode from the f8 menu and it locked up soon as the splash screen apeared. The computer uses onboard graphics, idk if that makes a difference.

I just tryed to boot into ubuntu from a live disk and it failed. Lets me select the mode at the beginning but wont load desktop. Im stumped.
I think its just a driver issue with linux as to why my ubuntu wont load. Its a slim line cd-rom.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Build
OS
Vista Business x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II x3 720be @3.15ghz
Motherboard
Asus M4A77D
Memory
2x2GB A-Data DDR2 pc6400
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia EVGA 8800gts (640MB,320bit)
Sound Card
Creative Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 226bw
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Seagate 320gig, WD 80gig
PSU
Rosewill 500watt
Case
Dynex
Cooling
Thermaltake V1
Keyboard
G15
Mouse
Razor DeathAdder
Internet Speed
10.0Mb/896Kb
It does sound like a graphics problem, either the chip-set driver (AGP Buss) or the actual video card drivers. Your on-board video may use an AGP bus. I have one desktop here that does even though it doesn't have an AGP slot on the motherboard. It sounds like the actual driver file for the AGP bus has been corrupted. If doing a repair didn't fix it and VGA mode doesn't work you may have to re-install windows. If you go that route I would back up any data you want to save and do a clean install. I can't think of anything else to try. Assuming its not actually a hardware fault that should fix it. Do you have a spare video card you could put in that PC?
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 10 Education 64 bit
CPU
AMD Phenom II X4 980 Black Edition Deneb 3.7GHz
Motherboard
Asus M4N68T-M V2 µATX Motherboard
Memory
8GB 4GBx2 Kingston PC10600 DDR3 1333 Memory
Graphics Card(s)
Zotac NVIDIA Geforce GT640 2 Gig DDR3 PCIe
Sound Card
VIA VT1708s High Definition Audio 8-channel Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
22" LG E2242 1080p and 2 19" I-INC AG191D
Screen Resolution
1280x1024 - 1920x1080 - 1280x1024
Hard Drives
Crucial M100 256 GB SSD and 500 GB WD Blue SATA
PSU
Thermaltake TR 620
Case
Power Up Black ATX Mid-Tower Case
Cooling
Stock heatsink and fan
Keyboard
Logitech Wireless K350 Wave
Mouse
Logitech Wireless M570 Trackman Wheel
Internet Speed
80 Mbps Down 30 Mbps Up
Antivirus
Windows Defender
Browser
Internet Explorer 11
Other Info
HP DVD1040e Lightscribe - External USB2
Hi

XP Recovery Console:

Option 2: Starting the Windows Recovery Console from the Windows XP CD-ROM

If you have not preinstalled the Windows Recovery Console, you can start the computer and use the Recovery Console directly from your original Windows XP installation disc. If your computer is already in Windows and you want to add the Windows Recovery Console as a startup option, go to the next section "Adding the Windows Recovery Console as a startup option."
  1. Insert the Windows XP CD into your CD drive and restart your computer. If you are prompted, select any options required to start (boot) from the CD.
  2. When the text-based part of Setup begins, follow the prompts. Select the repair or recover option by pressing R.
  3. If you have a dual-boot or multiboot system, select the installation that you want to access from the Recovery Console.
  4. When you are prompted, type the Administrator password.
  5. At the command prompt, type Recovery Console commands, and then you can refer to the commands that are listed in the "Available commands within Windows Recovery Console" section.
  6. At any time, you can type Help for a list of available commands.
  7. At any time, you can type Help commandname for help on a specific command. For example, you can type help attrib to display the help on the attributes command.
  8. At any time, you can exit Windows Recovery Console by typing Exit at the command line.

Recovery console Commands

Regards
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Win7 HP (x64)/Win7 Ultimate (x64)
CPU
Core i7 920
Motherboard
Intel X58
Memory
6 x 2GB Corsair XMS3
Graphics Card(s)
CF HD4890
Sound Card
Asus Xonar
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell 2408WFP
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1200
Hard Drives
2 x 150GB WDC Velociraptors (Raid 0)
1 x 1TB Seagate
1 x 1.5TB Seagate
PSU
Corsair HX1000W
Case
Antec 1200
Keyboard
Razer Lycosa/N52te
Mouse
Razer Lachesis
1) Appears to be a bad video driver. MS has a support page for XP startup hanging at agp.sys. Basically, it says disable installed video drivers and use the default VGA drivers.

Problems when Windows XP tries to load the Agp440.sys service

Try changing out the driver, look up your motherboard's website.

2) Regarding that "upgrade" option, I've seen it mentioned on a couple of sites (Pop in the XP cd and choose Install->Upgrade) but frankly I dont remember seeing this option myself. But what it would have done would be to install XP on top of itself, similar to an in-place upgrade. Are you using an ancient version of XP? Best to install the SP3 and the post-SP3 hotfixes.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Too many to describe...
OS
Windows 7 x64 pro/ Windows 7 x86 Pro/ XP SP3 x86
Sorry for the slow feedback, I went into the recovery console and disabled the agpcpq.sys service that it was freezing on at boot. Tryed booting into safemode again and it stoped at teh amdagp.sys this time. I dont want to get carried away with making changes in recovery console but i may try disabling a couple of these and noting them down to see if i can get this thing to boot.

Thanks for the advice everyone
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Build
OS
Vista Business x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II x3 720be @3.15ghz
Motherboard
Asus M4A77D
Memory
2x2GB A-Data DDR2 pc6400
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia EVGA 8800gts (640MB,320bit)
Sound Card
Creative Sound Blaster
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 226bw
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Seagate 320gig, WD 80gig
PSU
Rosewill 500watt
Case
Dynex
Cooling
Thermaltake V1
Keyboard
G15
Mouse
Razor DeathAdder
Internet Speed
10.0Mb/896Kb
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