jistme Posted August 30, 2012 Posted August 30, 2012 It might be my own fault, not being a big expert, but I've been using Win Toolkit before and this never happened before:I tried to make a fresh USB installer with McRip's updates integrated. (extracted dvd image and Win Toolkit on D: partition)Running and creating Win7 Ultimate x64.After completing I realised I forgot to add a driver, and ran it again (never did that before, and maybe i did something wrong there)Used the resulting USB stick to clean-install another PC, but noticed after doing so no updates or settings were added.Ran Win Toolkit all over again, same result. Removed Win Toolkit and dvd image files, started clean all over, same result.Now I get pop ups that my current C drive is getting full. Found a folder on my C drive named Wintoolkit with a 'mount' folder in it, which is getting larger and larger... (now about 11GB)Also muy current Windows is downloading updates while it was already up to date.Also some programs lost registration and say trial period ended and won't work anymore.I can rename the Wintoolkit folder and the 'mount' folder, but can't delete it (also tried changing ownership, unlock etc. etc)I am aware there is a setting somewhere were you can select to update your running Windows system, but I am sure I haven't touched that.In short, I now have a small disaster, I'll now have to completely reinstall my working PC which was running perfectly before.What may I have done wrong, and shouldn't there at least have been a warning that Win Toolkit was going to alter my running Windows installation?(anyway, still thanks for a great tool) Quote
SsurferR Posted August 31, 2012 Posted August 31, 2012 (edited) I doubt that is a issue in the software, probably a mistake on part of the user.Here are some solutions for your problems you mentioned:--if you can't delete the "WinToolkit" folder and you are absolutly sure you want to delete it, you can download a LiveCD of Ubuntu (linux), boot trou it and delete the folder your having trouble to delete.--regarding your windows, if somehow you messed up, you can simply go to restore option on windows and use a restore point date from before you start noticeing the problem you got.Hope it helps you, these are the simpliest ways you could resolve your problems. Edited August 31, 2012 by SsurferR Quote
ricktendo Posted August 31, 2012 Posted August 31, 2012 You guys gotta be careful what updates you integrate, I have also made corrupt iso's that are the result of hotfixes I integrate and/or remove from my offline packageOnly trust KUC to tell me what and whent to install a hotfix Quote
CrAzYs Posted August 31, 2012 Posted August 31, 2012 rick can u upload the video how to use KUC offline... i have try but it's not working for me. Quote
jistme Posted August 31, 2012 Author Posted August 31, 2012 While I apreciate the feedback and some tips, there seems to be some confusion about my posting and what happened.I was not trying to update my running system, so KUC has nothing to do with it.I was trying to create a bootable usb stick, with McRip updated Windows 7 x64, and had all neccesary files and Win Toolikt on D: partition.Somehow Win Toolkit changed and added files on my running system on C:It may have been my own fault, it may have been some bug/error in Win Toolkit or other software on my system.Now for the most part I am up and running again after a complete reinstall.I just thought to post this either for the sake of mentioning a possible bug in 1.4.0.65, either to learn what I exactly may have done wrong what caused this. I don't want to have this happen again. Quote
crashfly Posted August 31, 2012 Posted August 31, 2012 Likely your issue is related to "running out of space". WinToolkit makes a mount of the wim files (by default) to your system drive. Typically your system drive is also the location of the temporary directory. Both of those together could have caused your system drive to get full and therefore causing odd problems with your other programs (I have seen it happen when a drive gets full). The big lesson here is to make sure you have *lots* of room free on the drive that WinToolKit uses for its work. Quote
jistme Posted September 1, 2012 Author Posted September 1, 2012 Thnx crashfly, that sounds indeed like what might have caused it.I am using a relatively small ssd as system drive. Yet big enough (up till now) for everything I have been doing.There is no setting to move the Win Toolkit temp folders to another partition is there? Quote
Thiersee Posted September 1, 2012 Posted September 1, 2012 (edited) Thnx crashfly, that sounds indeed like what might have caused it.I am using a relatively small ssd as system drive. Yet big enough (up till now) for everything I have been doing.There is no setting to move the Win Toolkit temp folders to another partition is there?Of course!Options --> Misc, but you have to generate first the folder Wintoolkit on another HDD. BTW, you will see, what a speed lost you get with temp on HDD!I need for my configuration 40 min on SSD and more as twice on HDD. Edited September 1, 2012 by Thiersee Quote
jistme Posted September 1, 2012 Author Posted September 1, 2012 (edited) Thnx Thiersee, I am going to do that.edit:Ready integrating and installing.It took somewhat longer, but everything is perfect now. Edited September 1, 2012 by jistme Quote
techbound Posted September 2, 2012 Posted September 2, 2012 for kuc to work you need to mount the image with wintoolkit then point kuc to the mounted folder once done you have wintoolkit commit changes and bam your done with that step. Quote
CrAzYs Posted September 2, 2012 Posted September 2, 2012 i cant mount the image with wintoolkit. my version 65... what is ur version Lurker Quote
infringer Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 yes I had the same problem I ran the program from my 2TB drive but the default settings were chewing up my SSD it filled up the SSD not knowing that it creates a seperate mount folder. The developer did an excellent job but many people do run SSD's and because of this by default the program should do the mount in the directory that the program is extracted to rather then the absolute path of C:... SSD's have a small amount of write cycles and due to the fact that TRIM is only issued in time based intervals it will cause amplified writes which shorten the life of the drive even quicker... So I believe anyone using this program will logically run into the same issues until they click the options button and find out that everything by default goes to C: which in many cases is damaging to users of this program... It is however the best program developed for windows hands down there is not a better one out there that I have found the interface is the smoothest least error prone aside from this one little cavet. Quote
Thiersee Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 @infringerYou must not write on SSD, you can set the temp- and mount-folder on every other HDD! See pst #8.It is only slower (on my installation twice the time compared with SSD. Quote
Legolash2o Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 I'm actually considering to make WinToolkit to scan all partitions and create the WinToolkit folder on the one with a most free space.EDIT: Done, Win Toolkit will now select the partition with the most free space on first startup. Quote
bphlpt Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 I'm actually considering to make WInToolkit to scan all partitions and create the WinToolkit folder on the one with a most free space.It's fine for Win Toolkit to make the determination of where it thinks is the best place, but please then have a box pop up and tell the user where that place is and give them an option to either approve the selection, override the selection with their own choice, or maybe even cancel the whole thing.Cheers and Regards Quote
crashfly Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 It's fine for Win Toolkit to make the determination of where it thinks is the best place, but please then have a box pop up and tell the user where that place is and give them an option to either approve the selection, override the selection with their own choice, or maybe even cancel the whole thing.Cheers and RegardsI agree. The default initial selection is just fine, but give us a chance to change it. I have previously set aside a whole partition for just temporary files, but the partition is not the largest out of them all. Quote
Legolash2o Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 It will only scan for the largest freespace partition on first run, if you have already selected a path it will not change it. Quote
bphlpt Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 Still, I would appreciate the option of overriding the choice even on the first run.Cheers and Regards Quote
Legolash2o Posted September 3, 2012 Posted September 3, 2012 Still, I would appreciate the option of overriding the choice even on the first run.Cheers and RegardsIt says it can be changed via Options. It's like an extra click. Quote
bphlpt Posted September 4, 2012 Posted September 4, 2012 Fair enough. I assume then that there is at least some popup box or in-your-face notice as to what location has been selected, just so the user can't claim they didn't know that Win Toolkit was going to use XX: disk for its files? I'm really trying to help you keep from having to post RTFM type answers over and over when folks post here wondering why such-and-such disk was chosen. Cheers and Regards Quote
Legolash2o Posted September 4, 2012 Posted September 4, 2012 If you have the latest version just temporarily rename your settings.txt file and open Win Toolkit. Quote
bphlpt Posted September 4, 2012 Posted September 4, 2012 Perfectly acceptable approach. Thank You! I would suggest a slight change in wording to: "This can be changed in the 'Misc' tab of 'Options'", or something like that to make it even easier to find.Cheers and Regards Quote
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