Boot Camp ****: HAL.DLL and other problems

Okay I am really frustrated, so if I come off like a jerk... well, I don't mean to, but my frustration is going to bleed into the tone of this post. Let me ask you not to reply that I have a bad Windows CD. I've been a gosh darn network administrator for over ten frakking years now, and I successfully use the same bleeping CDROM disk on dozens of other computers all the bleeping time.
Okay, now that I've got that off my chest, here's the situation: I have a Windows XP Pro CD with Service Pack 3 slipstreamed into it. I downloaded it from Microsoft. My organization has a Select Agreement with them, so we can do that. There is a winnt.sif file on it that automates a few things (such as entering the key number), but it allows me to do the partitioning and formatting manually.
If I leave the partition as FAT32, then when the Windows installer attempts to reboot into the GUI portion of the install, then it says, "Disk Error. Press any key to restart." Pressing keys does nothing, so I have to power it off.
If I format the partition with NTFS (tried both Quick and Full formats with the same results), then it finishes the text mode portion of the install, reboots, and tells me that I'm missing HAL.DLL.
I have tried several different sizes of partitions (partitioning with the Boot Camp utility... not the Windows installer), and been through the text portion of Windows install at least a dozen times. I have searched the Net, and failed to find a CD that would allow me to attempt installing Windows off my RIS server. I have burned new copies of my CD onto CDR and CDRW media. The only thing I cannot do is obtain an original XP CD since our organization isn't big enough to qualify for Microsoft to send us Select CD's (and my boss ain't gonna pay for a retail copy just so that I can run Boot Camp). And please don't ask me if I'm properly licensed to install Windows on my Mac. I know the Windows EULA inside and out. It's all legit.
Any help here would truly be appreciated.

Perhaps you need to use an XP cd with sp2 slipstreamed, install boot camp update 2.1, then SP3.
The following URL has a note: --> http://support.apple.com/downloads/BootCamp_Update_2_1_for_WindowsXP
Important: Installation of Boot Camp 2.1 is required before installing Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3)

Similar Messages

  • When you load Windows via Boot Camp Assistant program and run Windows does not recognize the "usb" outlets cannot identify the device through the Dvd or flash

    When you load Windows via Boot Camp Assistant program and run Windows does not recognize the "usb" outlets cannot identify the device through the Dvd or flash

    Did you install BC drivers on the Windows side?

  • Upgrading to Vista with Boot Camp 2.1 and XP SP3

    Hello
    I decided to buy Vista to see for myself how it works. It hasn't come in yet, but I want to know if I can upgrade to Vista when I have Boot Camp 2.1, and Windows XP Service Pack 3.

    I have upgraded to Vista SP1 from XP SP3 successfully on one of my macs. Once Windows is loaded and up and running then you can upgrade it just like you normally would when running a Windows based PC.
    Axel F

  • Problems in Boot Camp with Wifi and internal speakers

    I loaded boot camp from Leopard with no known issues on installation. However, my wireless and internal speakers, which work fine in Leopard, do not work in Boot Camp. I'm guessing it's a driver problem, but I don't know how to proceed. I've tried reinstalling...
    Any help is appreciated.
    Kerry

    Hi Kerrywm, I have exactly the same problem. I can get my Apple Bluetooth keyboard to work fine after I set it up using a wired keyboard. But after a single reboot, the wireless keyboard is 'lost' in Windows XP. It's a real nuisance, it's like the Bluetooth 'preferences' for the keyboard are not remembered by Windows XP after restart. One exception however, after restart, seems to be that the top right hand key, the CD eject key on the keyboard, does work as a '+ volume' control key - its really odd! Fox.

  • Boot camp, windows xp and macbook pro-install problem

    MacBook Pro 1,1
    Mac OS X 10.6.8
    Boot Camp Windows XP
    I installed a SSD and want to put Windows XP back on the computer.
    I had Windows XP running under Boot Camp on my old HDD.
    During the Windows XP install when it tells you to
    press ENTER to install Windows XP
    press R to repair a Windows install
    press F3 to exit
    I can't get the install to accept any input from the keyboard.
    I tried searching the discussions but I'm not finding the answer.
    I'm sure it is just something simple I'm not doing. I had Windows XP
    running on this MacBook Pro before.
    Thanks

    I wonder if your XP works with SSD or some SSDs have had trouble with Windows on Macs...
    I'd search out PC forums + brand SSD for starters users with XP.
    Everyone I run across though have moved on to Windows 7 64-bit.

  • Cant boot missing hal.dll file - HELP!

    I have just installed my new MSI board, and I have a dreadful problem.  I cannot get my computer to boot.  It tells me that windows cannot start because the following file is mssing or corrupted: Hal.dll
    In fact the file is there.  I know this because if |I leave the windows install disk in the computer it boots ok.  I have tried using the rebuild command from the recovery console, and the repair option, but so far it does not work.
    Has anyone else had a similar problem?  I had no problem with my old board, and so I thought it might be something to do with this new board.  Are my settings incorrect?
    I have SCSI as well as IDE drives, and I cannot tell if the boot.ini file is pointing to the right drive, but I suspect it is.
    Please help!
    Dan

    hal.dll is a dll which interfaces your hardware to the operating system (Hardware Adapter Layer).
    I don't know which operating system you are using, so I can't tell you the total answer to your problem.  
    When you boot from your hard drive (as opposed to floppy disk or cd-rom), it will always look for the initial hardware loaders ($ldr$, ntldr, etc) from the boot drive (normally "C") prior to looking at boot.ini. From there it will give you a choice of which operating system to load.
    Incidentally, the loader is a dos based program so only knows about drives 1 & 2.
    the easiest way to get the operating system on the second drive, is to use the install disk from windows by executing "cd-rom":/setup.exe from the start menu.
    After removing the current version of the OS from the scsci drive, you may then install onto the scsi drive.  Ensure that the scsi controller is enabled for booting, so it's BIOS is enabled.
    Hope this helps.
    kd1im (MCSE)

  • Bootcamp: hal.dll and disk error SOLVED. Simple workaround

    Many people had the "hal.dll missing" and "No disk" error while trying to install Windows with bootcamp on OSX leopard. I read a lot of workarounds and solutions, which some are complicated and some just don't work.
    Here is my simple workaround to get rid of errors:
    (Principle: force the shell of windows to appear before installation, so that we can quick format the bootcamp partition with" format" command)
    1. Create a windows partition with bootcamp as usual (if you have already one then restore the OSX partition)
    2. Restart and boot on windows cd. (press the option key ("alt") during restart)
    3. When bluescreen appears and drivers are loading, press repeatedly F6 and F10. You should get a message that no SCSI disk was found and that you should press "S" or "enter" to continue. Press "enter". Now you should get a black screen in console mode.
    4. Now we format the bootcamp partition. Type this: "FORMAT C: /Q /FS:NTFS". Put FAT32 instead of NTFS if you want the file system to be FAT32.
    5. Press 'Y' to confirm.
    6. Restart the computer, boot on cd, and install windows as usual. When arrived on partitionning during install, DO NOT REFORMAT!!!! Install on the partition    that we just created before!
    PS: I think that bootcamp just messes up the windows partition. That's why you get "disk error". When formatting during the windows installation, the partition is correct for windows but it overwrites entirely the bootcamp partition instead of just formatting it. I think that the quick format from the shell does just change the file system without modifying the partition itself. However, it works, so why bother why it does?....
    Let me know if you have difficulties.
    Message was edited by: febex

    Perhaps you need to use an XP cd with sp2 slipstreamed, install boot camp update 2.1, then SP3.
    The following URL has a note: --> http://support.apple.com/downloads/BootCamp_Update_2_1_for_WindowsXP
    Important: Installation of Boot Camp 2.1 is required before installing Windows XP Service Pack 3 (SP3)

  • How do I install Lion on an MBP with Snow Leopard 10.6.8, Boot Camp'd XP and a Master Boot Record?

    I think this is called "a pickle."
    The machine is a 13" MacBook Pro, 2.66 GHz Core 2 Duo w/ 4 GB RAM and a 500 GB HDD.
    The HDD has a Snow Leopard 10.6.8 partition, and a Windows XP partition, via Boot Camp.  Its Partition Map Scheme, sadly, is a Master Boot Record. I need to reformat it to a GUID Partition Table scheme to install Lion, but when I attempt to boot it from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD to wipe the drive, it grey-screens.  Dead end.
    From what I can gather on the forums, I can't boot a 10.6.8 machine using a Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD.  I can't find my grey DVDs for this machine – still looking for those – but I expect those won't work either, being Leopard-generation?
    The machine works fine, for the most part, including the optical drive.  Has occassional display and wake glitches.  Its HDD is backed up on a Drobo via Time Machine.  I also have a 15" MBP Core i7 (with the exact same problem: 10.6.8, XP, MBR) which I can use for Target Disk Mode via FireWire.  If I try to wipe the HDD on the 13", using Disk Utility on the 15" via Target Disk Mode, will the 13" then boot successfully from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD?
    I just want to wipe the 13" machine, reinstall a fresh copy of Snow Leopard, then update it to Lion and restore from Time Machine, and never touch anything Windows-related ever again. (And then do the same for my 15", for which I've found my 10.6.3 grey disc. Not sure if that's any more promising.)
    Any help appreciated!

    Sounds like something is wrong with your disk. Have you tried cleaning it?
    The Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD is fine – it mounts on both my 13" and 15", and I successfully created an image of it on my 15".  I also tried my wife's Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD, also clean, which produced the same grey screen result.
    Have you tried to use boot camp to erase the Windows partition?
    Yep, this is supposed to be the proper way to remove a Windows XP partition from Boot Camp, so this was the first thing I tried.  I get the same error as everyone with a Master Boot Record scheme appears to get:
    The startup disk cannot be partitioned or restored to a single partition.
    Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS X Extended (Journaled) volume.  Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again.
    So, if I can't launch the Disk Utility from the Snow Leopard DVD, my next best guess is wiping it from my 15" over Target Disk Mode.  However, if I try that, and still can't get it to boot from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD, then I'm stuck with an MBP without an OS.
    My conclusion – that 10.6.0 DVDs can't boot to 10.6.8 machines – was based on forum posts about downgrading from Lion.  I was wondering if there's a way to create a "10.6.8 restore DVD," and try booting from that.  Shot in the dark perhaps.

  • Using Boot Camp to install Windows XP: problems with display going blank

    I have a new Mac mini (early 2009) connected to an older NEC MultiSync LCD (VGA only) display through a KVM.
    I initially used the Apple Mini DisplayPort to VGA adapter to make the display connection.
    All worked fine with Mac OS X, but when I attempted to use Boot Camp to install Windows XP (Home), the display would go blank with the display saying "no signal" at some point during the install and I couldn't get the mini's display back without power cycling the mini. Numerous attempts at removing the Boot Camp partition, re-partitioning, and retrying resulted in nothing but frustration. I typically had to force the mini to boot from the OS X install DVD or Mac partition to make the mini usable again.
    I have used my LCD display and KVM combination with a variety of computers running a variety of operating systems, including older Mac minis running both Mac OS X and XP, with no problems. And I intend to keep using it, so I wasn't going to assume the problem was there!
    After noting that Apple had already released a [firmware update|http://support.apple.com/downloads/Mini_DisplayPort_to_VGA_FirmwareUpdate] for this adapter to address "[possible intermittent flickering and compatibility issues|http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3492]", I double checked that it was up to date--and it was. But, it made me suspicious that this adapter might have some more problems and be the source of the troubles I was experiencing.
    So, I got an Apple Mini-DVI to VGA adapter and tried that.
    No more display problems! Everything works fine with Mac OS X. Windows XP installed without so much as a flicker, and it works smoothly with my setup.
    I'm curious if I'm the only one who was affected by this problem?

    Restart your Mac while holding down the Alt/Option-key until you get to the Boot Selection Screen.
    Choose to boot OSX.
    Use the BootCamp Assistant to remove the Windows partition.
    Go to System Preferences then Startup Volume and rest the default to be your OSX volume.
    Reboot your Mac again.
    Follow the instructions from here http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3173 and use the BootCamp Assistant again to install Windows 7
    Stefan

  • MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012) - Boot Camp/Win 7 - Num Lock Problem

    Hey,
    I have a client who has a MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012) who is experiencing a problem when booted into Windows 7 via Boot Camp in that he cannot type certain character like # (hash character by keystroke alt + 3) without Windows 7 error bleeping at him. He needs the # character as part of his password for logging into webmail.
    The Boot Camp setup has the latest Boot Camp drivers installed (this was a fresh Boot Camp setup/install today) and every other part of the hardware works I suspect that this problem is not a key mapping problem but more something to do with Windows registering Num Lock as being active.
    If the problem is that Num Lock is enabled then what is the keystroke to disable Num Lock? I thought it was fn + 6 but did this change since the Unibody MacBooks?
    I understand that there are ways of resurrecting number pad fuctionality as decribed in the MacWorld article (see link below) but this is a Mac OS X System Preference and as such would not operate when booted into Windows via Boot Camp.
    http://www.macworld.com/article/1142609/ressurect_numberpad.html
    Any advice will be greatly appreciated.

    You have Graphics card problem.
    Take it in Hardware problem:
    Genius reservation http://www.apple.com/retail/geniusbar/
    on-line https://getsupport.apple.com/GetproductgroupList.action
    check warranty https://selfsolve.apple.com/agreementWarrantyDynamic.do
    see if this applies http://appleinsider.com/articles/12/11/13/some-15-retina-macbook-pro-users-compl ain-of-graphics-issues-after-efi-update

  • ITunes library and Boot Camp (Snow Leopard and Windows 7)

    At the moment, I'm using a Macbook Pro running both OS X and Windows 7 Ultimate using Bootcamp to facilitate this.
    The problem that I have is that I keep my iTunes library on an external HDD. In OS X, this isn't a problem as the OS X version of iTunes manages the music on it; adding new podcasts that it downloads and also adding new CDs that I rip to the HDD.
    In Windows 7, I installed iTunes and have only run a single "Add folder to library", meaning that only the music that was on the HDD on the first instance is recognised by iTunes. This means that if I were to switch from Windows 7 to OS X, download some podcasts and then go back into Windows 7, iTunes in Windows 7 won't find these new podcasts.
    The other (and nowhere near important issue) is that if I forget to disconnect my iPhone before switching over to Windows 7, iTunes in Windows 7 will wipe the apps from it.
    Does anyone know how I may be able to resolve this

    Your iMac supports OS X Mavericks, so make a backup of your files in Mac OS X and Windows, open the Mac App Store and download OS X Mavericks for free. Check that your apps are supported > http://www.roaringapps.com
    OS X Mavericks includes Boot Camp Assistant 5, but it's compatible with Macs that can only use Boot Camp 4. Note that you only have the Boot Camp Assistant as the version 5, and not the drivers or anything else, so there's no problem in installing a 32-bit Windows 7 version if you want. Also, you won't lose your Windows copy after upgrading to OS X Mavericks, so don't worry

  • Boot Camp 2.x and Windows XP incompatible with Radeon 1600 Video Adapter

    Using Boot Camp Assistant 2.0 from a Leopard Install, I generated a 20GB partition and installed Windows XP SP2 reformatting during the install to NTFS. At this point things seemed to be working well. I then used my Leopard Install disk to update the MAC drivers. Now when I tried to reboot, I see the Windows splash window, the screen goes black, the screen goes cyan, then the screen goes black and stays that way. At this point, I cannot do anything with the Windows XP partition other than a power down by holding the power key. If I try to reboot on the XP partition, it goes through a hard drive repair, then goes black screen, light blue screen, black screen, hung. I can boot with Safe Boot, but I have no keyboard or trackpad drivers. I can run the system with an external USB mouse and keyboard.
    A friend found that the Video Adapters being used were a problem. (We can't find the reference.) If I go to Start/RightClick My Computer/Hardware/Device Manager/Video Adapters, I can right click on whatever adapters are located there and Uninstall them. At this point, the system will boot up fine using a generic video adapter. I don't know how well it would work if you wanted to use it for high speed gaming.
    On bootup I could get to the Internet. I went to Start/All Programs/Windows Update and did the Windows Update. I did it twice to get everything updated to Service Pak 3. (I have read that there is a problem if you upgrade the Apple Drivers to version 2.1 before you upgrade to Service Pak 3.)
    At this point, I installed the Boot Camp Update 2.1 and all worked well. I then installed Update 2.2 and the video was again a problem. It appears that the system was booting up ok, but it was happening behind a black screen. If I booted up in Safe Mode, connected a USB Mouse and Uninstalled the Video Adapter/Radeon 1600, I could boot up and the system worked fine.
    Unfortunately, Windows (for the first time that I know of) was smart enough to recognize that there was new hardware (the X1600) and it reinstalled the @!#$#-ed X1600 driver without asking me. Now I couldn't reboot without it hanging again.
    The final step was that I found that if, instead of Uninstalling, I Disabled the X1600, I can now run using the generic Video Adapter and Windows does not re-enable it.
    I hope this helps anyone who has a similar problem, so they don't waste 2 weeks like I did.

    Hi Dave,
    thanks for these informations.
    Before my beloved 2006 iMac went awry and finally bit the dust, I have used the ATI MobilityCatalyst Drivers for XP.
    If you're in for another try, here's the link http://support.amd.com/de/gpudownload/windows/Legacy/Pages/radeonmob_xp.aspx?typ e=2.4.2&product=2.4.2.3.10&lang=English
    Using the Generic Microsoft Graphics driver is IMHO not a solution, as it really only supports a minimum of the capabilities of the X1600 and is definitely not suited for gaming.
    Stefan

  • Boot camp, MAC pro and windows XP

    Hi,
    I am leading a programmers team, what we want is the faster machines to improve performance. Currently investigating an HP machine with windows XP 64 on it. But that doesn't work for us as most of hour programming tools do not work under XP 64. We cannot install 32 bit Windows because of the 2 Quad cores in the machines (according to IT).
    Solution could be MAC pro, same specs (2 quad cores and 4 GB internal memory ) but with Boot Camp I can install XP 32. Or am I wrong? Or will MAC pro with XP 32 do not give an performance increase we can expect with 8 core?
    Robert

    Hi Robert,
    for the IT guys: XP Prfessional does support up to 2 processors with multiple cores each.
    XP Home does only support one processor with multiple cores.
    The main problem with Mac Pro and 32-bit Windows XP or Vista (and possibly with the HP machine, too) is, that because the expansion slots are reserving quite some parts of RAM for their own Range of Adresses (even if no expansion card is in them) from the 4GB of RAM you will only get about 2GB for XP Pro 32-bit to see and use.
    Only chance to use the full amount of RAM is 64-bit Windows and then Vista is the one to use, because Apple does not provide any drivers for XP-64 bit.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • 13" MacBook boots to hal.dll issue - Help!

    I recently tried to install Windows XP using bootcamp, I read somewhere the section that bootcamp makes needed to be wiped or deleted, so it doesn't use the default structure. So I deleted the partition, I selected Windows to install to the new space. Although, it installed XP in the NTFS layout, and then refused to boot up, claiming hal.dll was missing.
    Everytime I start the MacBook it boots to this screen, I have tried MANY commands for Windows through using the advice of others who have had this issue, but none worked. After trying and trying, it eventually claimed something had been corrupted. I cannot remove the disk and cannot get it to boot to OSX. I have tried CommandOF to try and get the disk out but nothing happened.
    I have tried almost every thing I can think of, could someone please give me some advice and help me solve this?!
    Thank you!

    No joy unfortunately, it claims 'There is no floppy disk or CD in the drive', when there clearly is. I do not know the letter allocations of each partition or drive, so cannot try it another way.
    Is there any way I can just get back into OSX and delete the Windows partition? I have really tried to use key commands on boot up but it just goes to the Windows partition.
    Thanks,
    Max

  • Boot Camp, Mac Drive and Gaming

    I recently got a mac book pro, I am looking at installing boot camp for gaming. I want to keep the windows partition as small as possible i.e. have only the OS on there to allow for maximum flexibility. So i was thinking that i could simply install Windows XP on a 5Gb partition, then use MacDrive to allow installation of windows games on the main (MacOS hfs+j) partition. My question is, is this possible? i.e. does MacDrive allow for the installation of programs on a mac formatted drive? Particularly Steam?
    I have searched all the web and have not been able to find an answer, if anyone has had such a setup working/not working your input would be greatly appreciated.

    Installing MacDrive, launching the Installer for your Game(in Windows obviously) and selecting your hfs partition and a path will solve your problems.
    MacDrive tells Windows everything it has to know.
    I strongly recommend using NTFS rather than FAT32, you can bypass the only (bigger) disadvantage (osx can't write on it) by installing paragon ntfs4mac or ntfs-3g/macfuse.
    I played Call of Duty 4 and Unreal Tournament 3 without any problems or performance weaknesses on my hfs+ partition and even Warcraft 3 TFT (Mac Edition) ,installed on my NTFS Partition (just to test Paragon's Driver ^^ )

Maybe you are looking for

  • FaceTime bug or by design?

    Prior to iOS 7 you could select if you wanted to FaceTime somebody's phone number or email address. Now that option seems to have disappeared and both the email and number  receive the call.  If I turn the email receiving address off on my iPad the F

  • [SOLVED] Gnome 3.6: Battery/power icon missing from panel

    I've recently ressurected an old Arch laptop that had been lying dormant for a year or a half. Everything's been brought up to speed (pacman -Syu plus a lot of systemd study) satisfactorily except I've noticed that the battery/power icon on the panel

  • Purchase Req release strategy help

    PR's generated from MRP are being blocked, however when I convert a planned order from MRP into a PR it is automatically released. I want MRP generated Reqs to be also released. I tried creating a new class, characteristic and strategy group but ran

  • BI 7 Authorizations: Business Content and usage of which Objects?

    Good day I am busy with the BI 7 Analysis Authorizations concept. I have gone through SDN as well as other sites and obtained numerous guidelines for applying these authorizations. I will not be utilising the migration tool as I will be creating the

  • An internal error has occurred: db statement finalised twice

    Since updating to 5.6 I have regularly had the message "an internal error has occurred: db statement finalised twice". On earlier occurrences, I have clicked the box, and the message has gone away. I have optimised the catalogue, but that doesn't hel