文章編號: 271673 - 上次校閱: 2007年1月29日 - 版次: 1.3 Windows 千禧版 Cleanhd.txt 檔案內容
結論這份文件包含一份包含已包含與 Windows 千禧版 (Me) Cleanhd.txt 檔案中的資訊。Cleanhd.txt 檔案包含關於 Windows Me 安裝新硬碟上的資訊。安裝程式會 Cleanhd.txt 檔案複製到 [Windows\Options\Install] 資料夾。 注意: 這篇文章只有,資訊之用,且不包含任何疑難排解資訊。如果您正在搜尋疑難排解不稱為本文中的資訊,請嘗試再次使用下列文件中所列的關鍵字來搜尋 「 Microsoft 知識庫 」: 242450?
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/242450/EN-US/
)
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----------------------------------------
Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition
README for Installing Windows Me
Onto a New Hard Disk
June 2000
----------------------------------------
(c) Copyright Microsoft Corporation, 2000
If you have added a new hard disk to a personal computer,
you will need to carry out the following six tasks to prepare
it to run the Microsoft(R) Windows(R) Millennium Edition
(Windows Me) operating system:
- Getting Ready
- Creating the Boot Disk
- Partitioning the Hard Disk
- Using Fdisk to Partition the Hard Disk
- Formatting the Drives
- Installing Windows Millennium Edition
If you are installing Windows Me onto a formatted hard disk
just follow the last two steps.
IMPORTANT: All the steps you need for preparing a hard disk and
installing Windows Me are included here. However, if you are an
inexperienced user, it is not recommended that you install
the hard disk and prepare it for use yourself. If you are not
familiar with the related technical issues, it is recommended
that you contact a computer hardware service organization to
do this.
=============
GETTING READY
=============
The following hardware should already be set up and working:
- The hard disk drive is already physically installed in the
computer. That is, it is screwed into position, and the power
and data cables are connected.
- The computer recognizes the hard disk drive. The two common
types of hard disk drives are SCSI and IDE.
- If you have a SCSI drive, the SCSI adapter card will
identify the hard disk drive.
- If you have an IDE drive, you must make sure the computer's
CMOS is set to recognize the drive. If you have the option
for "auto detect," you can initially try selecting that
option. However, check your hardware documentation, as
there are many differences among BIOS manufacturers and
revisions.
Before you start, make sure you have the following available:
- A floppy disk that can be used to start the computer and
provide the utilities you need to make the new hard disk
drive usable.
- A Windows Millennium Edition CD.
- An earlier Windows product disk, if you have the Windows
Millennium Edition upgrade product (rather than the "full"
version, such as the version that comes installed on a new
computer).
When you are installing Windows Me, The Upgrade Compliance
Check asks you to show proof of possession of a qualifying
earlier version of Windows. You do not have to install the
older version first, but you must insert the disk to show
the Setup program that you have it. The Windows 95 or
Windows 98 CD product disk, or Windows 95 floppy disks
work for this purpose.
- Driver disks from manufacturers. If you have hardware that
requires drivers that are not part of Windows Me, you need
the disk or CD that the manufacturer provided with these
drivers.
- Documentation for your computer hardware, in case your need
to change CMOS settings or check other information.
Before you start, do the following:
- Make sure that the computer's built-in anti-virus protection
is disabled before you start. Your computer may not have
this feature, but if it does, you may need to check your
computer's documentation to learn how to turn it off. This
protection can be turned on again after Windows Me is
completely set up.
- Determine whether your computer requires "drive overlay
software" to allow it to see large hard drives. If it does,
you might need to use that software to prepare the drive.
However, even though this software comes with most hard
drives, you should not install it unless it's required to
properly access the drive. Most recently manufactured
computers do not require this software.
NOTE: You may encounter some differences in the following
procedures, depending on your system and your preferences.
For example, some steps differ if your computer has more
than one physical hard disk drive, such as when the
second drive has applications installed on it and you
want to install Windows Me on the D drive rather than
on the C drive.
======================
CREATING THE BOOT DISK
======================
If you do not have a boot disk, also called a Windows Me
Emergency Startup (boot) Disk (EBD), follow these instructions
to create one.
If you have access to a computer that is currently running Windows Me
1. In Control Panel, double-click Add/Remove Programs, and then
click the Startup Disk tab.
2. Click Create Disk, and then follow the instructions on the
screen.
- An EBD from Windows 98 will also work with this procedure.
The startup disk you created can find and allow access to
most, but not all, CD drives. If it can't find or access your
drive, follow the instructions that came with your hardware
to create a boot disk that will allow access to the CD-ROM
drive.
- If an error message appears, your computer may be set to boot
from the hard disk rather than from the floppy disk. To change
this option in the computer's CMOS setup, see your computer's
documentation.
==========================
PARTITIONING THE HARD DISK
==========================
Hard disk drives are divided into areas called partitions.
There are two types: Primary and Extended. Drive letters are
assigned automatically by the system, so you can't choose to
assign a particular letter to a drive. Drive letters are
assigned in order, as follows:
- The Primary partition gets the drive letter C. If the computer
has more than one physical hard disk and each has a primary
partition, the first drive's primary partition gets the
letter C, the second drive's primary partition gets D, the
third drive's primary partition gets E, and so on.
- An extended partition takes whatever space on the drive that
the primary partition isn't using. After you create extended
partitions, you can create logical drives in these partitions,
and those logical drives are assigned drive letters. (The
extended partition itself does not receive a drive letter.)
- After the system assigns letters to all primary partitions on
the physical hard disks, it gives the first logical drive in
the first extended partition the next letter, then the next
logical drive in that partition is assigned the next available
letter, and so on.
- When all logical drives in that partition have drive letters
assigned, the system finds the next physical drive that might
be available and looks for logical drives in any extended
partitions and continues this process.
A second, third, or fourth drive is not required to have a
primary partition. Such a drive can have just an extended
partition with logical drives in that partition.
Example: Creating Multiple Drives on a Single Disk
For this example, assume your computer has a single new empty
6-GB hard disk and no CD-ROM drive. With no partition, the hard
disk is unusable. You make a 2-GB primary partition. Because
it's a primary partition and it's the first drive, it gets the
letter C. You decide to make the remaining 4 GB, which has not
been claimed, into an extended partition. You now have your
C drive defined and an extended partition taking the rest of
the drive.
You decide to make a 3-GB logical drive in the extended
partition, which gets drive letter D. This computer now has
a 2-GB C drive, a 3-GB D drive, and 1 GB of disk space left
over that could be used to make a 1-GB drive (which would
get the letter E) or two 500-MB drives (which would get
letters E and F).
======================================
USING FDISK TO PARTITION THE HARD DISK
======================================
To partition the drive, you use a program called Fdisk that's
on the Emergency Startup Disk (EBD) disk you made earlier.
NOTE: Always follow the Fdisk on-screen prompts carefully. The
program tells you how to maneuver through the menus, when
to press the ESC key to go back, when you need to restart
your computer, and so on.
To partition the hard disk:
1. At the A command prompt, type fdisk, and then press ENTER.
If the hard disk is larger than 512 MB, Fdisk asks whether
to enable Large Disk Support:
- If you want to install other operating systems on this
computer, you need to know whether they can read FAT32.
If they cannot, choose No. Operating systems such as
Windows NT(R) 4.0, for example, cannot read FAT32, but
Windows 2000 can.
- If you don't plan to install operating systems other than
Windows Me or Windows 2000, you will probably want to use
Large Disk Support. It allows you to create partitions
larger than 2 GB (which is the limit for FAT16) and
provides greater file storage efficiency.
2. When you are prompted about enabling Large Disk Support, type
Y or N, and then press ENTER. The Fdisk main menu appears.
3. At the command prompt, type 1 to create a Primary partition.
You are then asked whether you want to use the maximum space
(the entire drive):
- If you choose Yes, this uses up to 2 GB for a FAT16
partition or the entire drive for a FAT32 partition.
- If you choose No, you can specify how large you want the
partition to be.
If you want to use only part of the drive as the Primary
partition, you can return to this menu later to choose
Option 2 to create the Extended partition. When you choose
Option 2, you are prompted whether to use the remainder of
the drive; then follow the prompts through the process of
creating logical drives in that partition. Continue with
this process until all the space is used up on the hard
disk.
4. Optionally, to make the Primary partition "Active," select
Option 2 from the Fdisk main menu. Follow the instructions.
The Active partition is the partition that the computer boots
from. You need to set the Active partition if you created both
Primary and Extended partitions. If you created only a Primary
partition, it will automatically be set to Active.
5. When all this is finished, press the ESC key to exit Fdisk.
When you are prompted to start your computer, leave the EBD
disk in the A drive and restart your computer by using the
power switch or by pressing CRTL+ALT+DEL.
=====================
FORMATTING THE DRIVES
=====================
After the partitions and logical drives are created, you need
to format them.
To enable CD-ROM support:
1. After you restart your computer, a menu appears prompting you
to choose whether you want CD-ROM support.
- Select Option 1 or 2 to boot with CD-ROM support if you are
using a Windows Me Startup Disk.
- Select Option 1 if you are using a Windows 98 Startup Disk.
2. Watch for any error messages. There will be several
informational messages crossing the screen while the EBD
looks for your CD-ROM drive, but these are not necessarily
error messages.
When the display returns to the A prompt, you must format the
Primary partition (the C drive) you just created with Fdisk,
plus any logical drives created in any extended partitions.
IMPORTANT: If the computer has more than one hard disk drive,
make sure you are formatting the correct drive.
Otherwise, you can lose information that you cannot
recover. For example, before formatting drive D, at
the A prompt, type "dir d:" to make sure there is no
data on it. If the drive is empty, you should receive
an error message when you try to perform this command.
To format the hard drive:
1. To format drive C, at the A prompt type the following:
format c:
and then press ENTER. You will be warned that all data will be
lost.
Select Yes to continue with the format.
2. For each logical drive you created (such as D and E), at the
A prompt type the following:
format d: (or the appropriate drive letter)
Make sure you are formatting only the new drives you created,
not other drives on other hard disks in your computer.
=====================================
INSTALLING WINDOWS MILLENNIUM EDITION
=====================================
If you use a Windows Me Emergency Startup Disk (EBD), the CD-ROM
drive is automatically assigned the drive letter two higher than
the last hard-disk partition. If you have only a C drive, the
CD-ROM drive will be E. If you have C and D hard drives, the
CD-ROM will be drive F, and so on. The drive letter immediately
after your last hard drive is assigned to the Ramdrive used by
the EBD.
To install Windows Me on the new drive:
1. Insert the Windows Millennium Edition CD in the drive.
2. To change to the CD-ROM drive, at the A prompt type E:
(or the appropriate drive letter), and then press ENTER.
3. Type the following:
setup
and then press ENTER.
4. Follow the instructions on the screen. If you have the Windows
Me Upgrade product, you must insert a CD or floppy disk from
a previous version of Windows. The instructions will tell you
when to insert the Windows Me CD back into the drive.
5. You're on the way! Just continue to follow the instructions
on the screen.
機器翻譯重要:本文是以 Microsoft 機器翻譯軟體翻譯而成,而非使用人工翻譯而成。Microsoft 同時提供使用者人工翻譯及機器翻譯兩個版本的文章,讓使用者可以依其使用語言使用知識庫中的所有文章。但是,機器翻譯的文章可能不盡完美。這些文章中也可能出現拼字、語意或文法上的錯誤,就像外國人在使用本國語言時可能發生的錯誤。Microsoft 不為內容的翻譯錯誤或客戶對該內容的使用所產生的任何錯誤或損害負責。Microsoft也同時將不斷地就機器翻譯軟體進行更新。 按一下這裡查看此文章的英文版本:271673?
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/271673/en-us/
)
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