Reconstructing a System with Damaged Files

You might need to restore a user's system configuration and working environment if hardware fails or is being replaced, or if files have been damaged on the hard disk. You can use the Emergency Repair Disk created during Windows NT installation to restore the system files. However, you lose any changes that were made to the system after installation when you use the Emergency Repair Disk to repair files such as the Registry hives unless you updated hive files on the Emergency Repair Disk. To update the Emergency Repair Disk with a current copy of the Registry hive files, use Repair Disk Utility (Rdisk.exe), a tool installed with Windows NT.

You can use one of the following methods to reconstruct the system from backups (as described in "Backing Up and Restoring Registry Hives" in Chapter 24, "Registry Editors and Registry Administration"):

If you attempt to restore damaged SAM or Security hives, you must use this second method. You cannot replace these hives while Windows NT is running. This means that if your system files are on an NTFS volume, you must have another instance of Windows NT available on that system to be able to restore the SAM and Security hives. Or, you can use the Emergency Repair Disk to restore the default SAM and Security hives.