The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSWhen you restart your computer, you may receive one of the following error messages:
CAUSEThis problem may occur if one or more of the following conditions exists:
RESOLUTION
To resolve this problem, use the appropriate method:
Method 1Check any diskettes for viruses that may have been used in the computer since the last time you were able to successfully restart Windows NT.NOTE: You may need to use more than one brand of virus detection software to detect and remove various viruses. If a virus has infected the Windows NT computer and a virus detection program cannot remove the virus and repair the system, you will have to reinstall Windows NT. For more information on how to protect the boot sector from viruses in Windows NT, see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: ARTICLE-ID: Q122221 Method 2Windows NT requires a mini-port driver to communicate with the boot controller. If the device driver is corrupt or incompatible with your controller, you can replace it by copying a new drive to the %systemroot%\system32\drivers folder or through the Emergency Repair process. On computers running on a SCSI controller or ATAPI enabled systems, SCSIPORT.SYS and DISK.SYS (Windows NT 4.0 only) device drivers are also required to successfully boot.If you attempt a "WINNT /B" installation, you may receive a STOP 0x7B before mass storage detection takes place. To work around this, when the computer reboots after the initial file copy, press F6 as soon as "Setup is inspecting your computers hardware configuration" is displayed. This will allow you to add a mass storage device at the very beginning of text mode setup. ARTICLE-ID: Q125933 Method 3If an IRQ or I/O port address conflict exists between your boot controller and another controller in the system, Windows NT will either hang or stop with the Stop 0x0000007B error message. If you recently added new hardware, remove the new hardware or re-configure it so it does not conflict with the resources of any other installed controllers.Check the SCSI chain for proper termination. Remove any non-essential SCSI devices or check to ensure each SCSI ID is unique. ARTICLE-ID: Q102651 Method 4The Windows NT Boot partition must exist within the first 1024 cylinders of the boot device. This is due to restrictions of the INT-13 BIOS call used to start the operating system. Check your CMOS settings for LBA support on IDE based systems, or your SCSI controllers BIOS settings for enabling drive translation for drives greater than 2GB.ARTICLE-ID: Q114841 Method 5If the file system is corrupt and Windows NT cannot mount the boot volume during start, move the drive to another machine running Windows NT and run the CHKDSK command on that drive. Alternately, attempt to create a parallel installation of Windows NT on the drive in a separate directory. The Windows NT Setup program checks the integrity of the volume prior to copying files and may fix some problems.Method 6If the SYSTEM Hive in the Windows NT registry is corrupt, it may prevent Windows NT from loading the Mini-port device driver required by the boot controller. To resolve this problem, use one of the following methods:
ARTICLE-ID: Q165748 Method 7Many computers are equipped with a 5.25-inch and a 3.5-inch floppy diskette drive in one single unit. When you install Windows NT on a computer with this floppy drive unit, the STOP 0x7B error message may appear during Setup while Windows NT Setup disk 2 is being read. To resolve this problem, disable the Drive Swapping option in your system BIOS. For information about correcting this problem, see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:ARTICLE-ID: Q126423 Method 8Install using the three boot floppies, a bootable CD, winnt or winnt32. Install the device driver recommended by hardware vendor if one is available.Method 9Install using the three boot floppy disks. Install the device driver recommended by hardware vendor if one is available.Additional query words: 3.50 3.51 4.00 0x7B Virus trap stop ntfaqset
Keywords : kbusage ntstop |
Last Reviewed: October 12, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |