Here is a non exhaustive list of tested sources with download links where possible.
In short:
- Any Windows version for PC starting from 2000- XP, 2003, Vista, Server 2008, Server 2012, 8, WinFLPC and so on. It supports both 32 and 64 bits versions. For XP/2003 versions there is advanced option to prepare source to be installed onto USB disk.
- UBCD4Win, BartPE, WinBuilder etc. PE1 based source
- Windows PE2 and above based source
- Many GNU Linux based sources- Ubuntu, Fedora, many antivirus rescue disks etc. etc. refer to this page for more
- DOS based ISOs such as UBCD
- other ISO images as long as they are compatible with grub4dos ISO emulation- Acronis True Image ISO, Paragon Boot Media to name a few
In addition the program can add Syslinux boot entry and boot such source, which boots using Syslinux or Isolinux.
Yes, just add them one after another, i.e. add first source of the same type, press GO, when finished transferring it onto the USB disk add the second, press GO and so on. There is no need to restart the program between each source. The only two exceptions, when multiple similar sources are not supported, are PE1 (BartPE, UBCD4Win…) and Syslinux based ones.
- Try the integrated DPMS option before starting Text mode, try “Auto-detect and use F6 SATA/RAID/SCSI Driver” menu first, if that doesn’t work for you and Setup bluescreens or hangs for example, then try “Auto-detect and use F6 SATA/RAID/SCSI Driver + Firadisk“. It would select and add the appropriate mass storage driver to a virtual floppy, which will be used by Setup to add the needed drivers.
- Integrate BTS mass storage drivers pack into your source before preparing the USB disk. Make sure Text mode option is selected. Including other driver packs (Sound, Video etc.) makes such source quite universal.
- Switch AHCI(SATA) mode to IDE (Compatible) in BIOS if there is such option.
- Integrate the proper mass storage drivers with nLite beforehand.
- Supply a floppy image with the appropriate SATA/AHCI drivers using the advanced option “Custom drivers/F6 floppy image for 2000/XP/2003 Setup“. It needs to have txtsetup.oem file in it and be suitable for Text mode part of the installer.
- On some motherboards USB booting is tricky, common example are many Dell systems. A modified NTDETECT.COM usually solves the problem. Next use the advanced option “Custom NTDETECT.COM file for 2000/XP/2003 Setup” to select the custom NTDETECT.COM and use when source is prepared
- The source does not have the appropriate mass storage (SATA, AHCI) drivers, refer to A3 for solutions
It expects partitioned and formatted disk with MBR (Master boot record) and an active partition. Typically, unless already partitioned with another tool or diskpart in Vista and later, Windows does not format blank USB removable media (most USB sticks) in such way, instead, they are formatted as a superfloppy with no MBR and single partition occupying the whole space, thus not bootable.
Either use the auto-format option, or use one of the tools RMPrepUSB, FBInst or BootIce to repartition and format it.
Generally speaking- yes. Due to the numerous ways to customize XP for example, it’s hard to test every kind of customization, hence severely modified sources may not install properly. In case of NT6 (Vista and above) customized source, as long as updates or hotfixes are integrated into install.wim and using setupcomplete.cmd script, which seeks for files on the system drive, rather than the source DVD, there should be no issues.
- Display disk drives on all interfaces, not only USB – this should be self explanatory, show all detected disks, not only the ones on USB interface. Use it with caution, selecting wring disk may lead to data loss.
- Don’t check for and install grub4dos MBR – skips checks for grub4dos/fbinst MBR. Use it if you have custom prepared and formatted USB disk and you did take care of its boot ability.
- Shared BTS driver pack OEM folder – if XP/2000/2003 sources have BTS driver packs integrated, this options will set one OEM folder for all sources where the options was used, instead of each source having own OEM folder in the corresponding WINSETUP sub-directory. BTS presetup.cmd is edited accordingly.
- Prepare Windows 2000/XP/2003 to be installed on USB – prepares the transferred source so it can be installed to USB disk. That could be to the same USB disk, or another of the same type, i.e. USB stick with the Setup files and target USB stick, or USB fixed disk and target USB fixed disk. Internal hard disks and any other mass storage devices should be removed or disabled during setup process. USB drivers are set to start early, and a small service, USBbootWatcher, is installed which monitors the USB drivers settings in registry for changes. If there are such, they are reverted to the default settings as in usbbootw(atcher).cnf. Another driver takes care for USB boot when there are no any other disks and only USB removable one- WaitBT, without it Windows typically will crash with 0x0000007B stop error.
- Remove disk space requirements from txtsetup.sif – removes disk space requirements in txtsetup.sif. Useful if you are installing Windows XP/2000/2003 on disk with limited space, less than the allowed one, and you know your source would fit.
- Show debug messages during Text mode – show debug messages from WaitBT driver at start of Text mode of XP/2000/2003 Setup.
- Custom folder and menu name for 2000/XP/2003 Setup – use if you want to set custom names for the sub-directory and boot menu names for 2000/XP/2003 sources.
- Do not copy and use DPMS – do not add the DPMS feature to the USB disk. DPMS is an automated solution by Chenall and modified by Steve for adding the needed mass storage drivers into a virtual floppy, which is used by Windows 2000/XP/2003 setup to add AHCI/SATA/SCSI/RAID drivers.
- Custom drivers/F6 floppy image for 2000/XP/2003 Setup – it will be loaded as a virtual floppy before start of Text mode part of 2000/XP/2003 Setup. If DPMS does not work for you this could be another option. Please note that only the default driver as stated in txtsetup.oem could be used in setup process.
- Custom NTDETECT.COM file for 2000/XP/2003 Setup – browse to a custom NTDETECT.COM and include it in the selected 2000/XP/2003 source. That’s useful to prevent 0x0000007B stop error on some rare systems. Details could be found here.
- Custom menu names for Vista/7/8/Server Source – use if you want to set custom names for the sub-directory and boot menu names for Vista, Server 2008, Win7, Win8 and so on sources.
- Launch Q-Dir before Setup – this will add Q-Dir file explorer, which will be launched before start of NT6 (Vista and later) setup. When it’s closed, setup will start. Helpful if you need to browse the contents of the hard disks, backup and restore files etc. before running Setup.
- Add boot-critical drivers, loaded before start of Setup – adds a folder with custom drivers, loaded before start of Setup. Each INF file inside is processed and passed to DrvLoad.exe as an argument. Drivers for non-present devices are ignored. There are some limitations- if the driver .inf file requires a restart, Windows PE will ignore the request. If the driver .sys file requires a restart, the driver cannot be added by using Drvload. All loaded drivers will be propagated to the OS being installed. Use this option to add boot-critical drivers, such as USB 3.0, AHCI/SATA/RAID etc. For non boot-critical drivers, take a look at the proven and reliable Stand Alone Driverpack utility.
- Add persistence– adds a persistence ext2 partition of the selected size as third partition entry, using the selected volume name (default is CASPER-RW). You will also most likely need to append persistent to your boot menu options- for *buntu and derivatives- at the isolinux boot menu select your language, then press F6, then press ESC and add persistent to the boot string, then press Enter to boot. For other distros please consult with the documentation what kernel parameter and volume name has to be used.
There are many possible reasons, refer to this tutorial for some ideas.
Yes, since version 1.1, for Windows NT6/10 family- Vista x64 SP1 and above. Please note that until Windows 8, only 64 bit versions support boot under EFI, and the partition on the USB disk must be formatted in FAT32 in order to be recognized and booted in EFI mode.This is limitation of (U)EFI, some vendor specific implementations may support other file systems such as NTFS. More details here and here.
32 bit (U)EFI boot, supported in Windows 8 and later, is possible only on 32 bit (U)EFI hardware, such as some tables with recent Intel Atom processors. In other words, UEFI requires the firmware and operating system loader (or kernel) to be size-matched; for example, a 64-bit UEFI implementation can only load a 64-bit UEFI operating system boot loader or kernel.
There is nothing else to be modified, just use FAT32 partition, the program will do the rest. The same USB disk will also work in BIOS mode without modifications.
If your ISO file is over 4GB and can’t fit on FAT32 formatted volume, program will take care and split the large ISO in smaller chunks. Alternatively, please take look at this thread on how to use NTFS UEFI driver.
The same way the first one was added, there is even no need to restart the program, once the first one was transferred to the USB disk, select the new source and press GO again.
The program uses a copy of BOOT.WIM and few other files in WINSETUP folder. If disk space is concern, you may safely modify the original ISO image in the corresponding WINSETUP subfolder and delete BOOT.WIM in it. This way of booting helps in some rare occasions when Setup would not start from USB disk.
Program is free for personal and commercial use and can be freely redistributed as long as the licenses of the tools included are not violated and there is clear link to this page or the home page @ msfn forum if it is hosted elsewhere.
The program may not be sold or included in commercial products without written consent from its author.
This may happen on some machines if the partition on the USB disk where source files are is FAT32 formatted. Use NTFS instead if you do not need to boot Vista and later in (U)EFI mode with the same USB disk, or look at A9 on how to try (U)EFI and NTFS.
Here are some comparison tests for each file system, preparing and running XP Setup on XP and Windows 7 host OS.
Please put WinSetupFromUSB.log file and all .cab files in backup folder in a zip or 7zip archive, and upload it to datafilehost.com for example. These files are in the folder where program was extracted to.
Then leave a comment on the help page, mentioning what the problem exactly is, and a download link to the uploaded log files.
- Windows Vista/7/8/10/Server 2008-2012– delete the corresponding ISO file and directory on the USB disk\WINSETUP\. Then edit Windows bcd menus with the included BootIce or the free VisualBCD- edit \boot\bcd for BIOS boot and \efi\microsoft\boot\bcd for EFI boot
- Windows XP/2000/2003 – delete the corresponding folder in USB disk\WINSETUP\. Then edit winsetup.lst in USB disk root and remove the relevant lines (in bold):
…
title First part of Windows XP Pro Setup from partition 1
set ISOPATH=/WINSETUP/XPpSP3
…
map –unmap=0:0xff && map –rehooktitle title Second part of Windows XP Pro Setup/Boot first internal disk
savedefault
…
chainloader (hd0)+1
rootnoverify (hd0)title \n
roottitle First part of Windows XP Home Setup from partition 1
…
- Linux/Other Grub4dos compatible ISO– delete the ISO file from USB disk\ISOs. Then edit menu.lst in USB disk root, preferably with an advanced text editor such as the free Notepad++. Delete the following lines (in bold):
title My Linux Iso
map –unmap=0:0xff
…
…
root (0xff)
chainloader (0xff)title My Other Linux ISO
- Windows Vista/7/8/10/Server 2008-2012– edit bcd menus with the included BootIce or the free VisualBCD– edit <USB disk>\boot\bcd for BIOS boot and <USB disk>\efi\microsoft\boot\bcd for EFI boot.
- Windows XP/2000/2003 – Edit with a proper text editor such as Notepad++ <USB disk>\winsetup.lst as in the above answer 15
- Linux/Other Grub4dos compatible ISO– edit <USB disk>\menu.lst as in the above answer 15
Please refer to this in-depth explanation from the author of RMPrepUSB and easy2boot
Under UEFI, currently only Windows sources can be booted.
Program uses grub4dos for BIOS and Microsoft bootmgr for UEFI boot. Grub4dos does excellent job booting just about anything, including most Linux ISOs without any modifications. Unfortunately, UEFI is completely different architecture compared to BIOS, and grub4dos can’t and won’t support it. As of now, as far as I am aware, there is no similar boot manager such as grub4dos, which supports same features needed to boot Linux ISOs without modification and also supports UEFI. Grub2, which is the closest candidate and supports UEFI, does not yet support these grub4dos features.
Yes. As long as you use unmodified Microsoft source, it should work just fine.
I am trying to do a USB stick with
Windows 7 32 & 64bit ISO
Windows 8.1 32 bit ISO
Windows 8.1 64 bit ISO
but I always end up with only 1 of the Windows 8.1 on the GRUB4DOS screen all I get is
0 Windows NT6 (Vista/7 and above) setup
1 second part/continue NT6 setup (boot first internal disk)
0 takes me to Windows 8.1 setup
1 takes me to an error 13: invalid or unsupported executable format press and key to continue
I open up the program, select it to format USB stick as NTFS and select Win 7 Iso click GO, wait til its done then select Win 8.1 ISO and click GO again, says its done succesfully
What am I doing wrong?
I have succesfully done a Windows 7 and Hirens CD
Thanks
0 should take you to another menu with all NT6 sources listed, but for some reason this is not happening.
Can you put in a zip archive and upload to datafilehost.com WinSetupFromUSB.log file and all cab files in “backup” directory?
I have had some success.
I did Win 8.1 first then Win 7 and now I can access both of them, just need to try it with the 8.1 64bit as well now 🙂
Build order shouldn’t matter, I need to look at the log files to tell more.
Win 8.1 32 & 64bit seem OK now but Win7 twice came up with an error somehting like “waiting for USB disk to initalize please wait”, and the error kept repeating, but I have just tried it again and the error appeared once then continued on with the setup, I think that is more an issue with the memory stick than your program though.
It all seems good now
Hello everyone … I want to know if i can do that :
for example i have in my usb Windows 8, and i want it to upgrade to 8.1 , how can i delete old ISO and put new iso in my usb boot ?
p.s sorry for my low english…
If you don’t have other data on the USB disk select auto format option and add the new Window ISO. If you have enough space on it, don’t format it, just add the new one the way you added the first one.
i have other data on my usb, but i dont have enought space, so i mean, i want to replace some iso with newer versions, not to add another… to replace
You can’t upgrade. Free up space by deleting the old ISO file and boot.wim next to it in the relevant subfolder in WINSETUP. The old boot menu name will be still displayed, just ignore it.
Okay… thank’s
RE: Point 9 UEFI and FAT32
Is it possible to format the USB stick with exFAT and then have the benefit of files over 4GB and be able to boot from a UEFI system?
Thanks
Not as per EFI specifications, only FAT16/32. You’d better try the mentioned NTFS EFI driver, or if you could find ExFAT one.
If your ISO is just a little over 4GB then you can delete BOOT.WIM in it to save 140-180MB, once it’s transferred on the USB disk.
To answer my own question, no it is not possible to boot from exFAT from UEFI, only FAT32, I wonder what genius decided against NTFS?!?!?!?
Hi,
I find your tool very helpful and quite a time saver! I would like to donate some money to this project to thank you and encourage continued development. Do you have a paypal donate button anywhere? I cannot find it.
I am glad you appreciate the program, you could find the donate button when you launch the program, at the bottom left side.
After I’ve installed windows 7 and installing some programs into the freshly installed windows, I restarted the machine. After the BIOS screen I keep seeing a “GRUB4DOS” even after I’ve finished installing windows 7 using the program. I am now stuck in a loop where it makes me choose between four choices:
find /menu.lst, /boot/grub/menu.lst, ./grum/menu.lst
commanline
reboot
halt
i’ve tried the last two choices, but I am still stuck. what do i do?
Thanks in advance.
I think what you are seeing is incorrectly installed or damaged Windows activator, which happens to be using grub4dos as well. Sorry, can’t advice any further.
Great, very useful and extremely versatile tool, thanks! But i have to say, that the tooltips are shown a much too short time (just about 5 seconds), which is far to short for the longer tooltips. Annoying here is, moving the mouse away and again over the item/button does NOT show the tooltip again. Had to use screenshot and ctrl+v in Paint as a ‘workaround’. Why don’t you let them displayed all the time, as long as the mouse is over an item/button?
And in the menu there is a spelling mistake at ‘Download the latest version’ 🙂
Thanks.
Under windows 7 tooltips work fine, it’s XP where they show for a bit short time, at least on my computer. AutoIt doesn’t give any options about that, but I found a few workarounds and will play with them a bit.
Typo is fixed, thanks.
I created a Win XP 64-bit USB flash disk with WinSetupFromUSB and I end up at BSOD, error 0x0000007B. Integrated DPMS option before starting Text mode is not available for me, there is no
“Auto-detect and use F6 SATA/RAID/SCSI Driver” or
“Auto-detect and use F6 SATA/RAID/SCSI Driver + Firadisk“
I did not disable that option when creating the disk.
Can you help?
DPMS contains 32 bit drivers only, BTS driver pack which is used does not support 64 bit XP or 2003. You could try the F6 floppy image option providing a floppy image with the needed drivers, or manually integrate the needed drivers, or switch to IDE/compatible in mode in BIOS if possible.
i have 2 iso, windows 7 32bit.iso and windows 7 64bit.iso. Can put them all in one Flashdisk ??
Yes, you can. Take a look at FAQ 2, FAQ 10 and this tutorial for more info.
Windows 7 mbr.iso and Windows 8.1 ESD.iso, can put them all in one Flashdisk ??? Thx..
What exactly is Windows 7 mbr.iso? And Windows 8.1 ESD.iso?