This article describes the switches you can use with the Windows 95 Setup program. /? - This switch provides a brief summary of the available Setup switches and the correct command line syntax. /c - This switch causes Setup to not run SMARTDrive. /d - If you do not want Setup to use your existing Windows configuration (such as your current Win.ini and System.ini files), use this switch. /id - If you do not want Setup to check for the minimum disk space required to install Windows 95, use this switch. /it - If you do not want Setup to check for the presence of "dirty" or "deadly" terminate-and-stay-resident programs (TSRs) that are known to cause problems with Windows 95 Setup, use this switch. \** PARTNER: It has been reported that the /IT switch does not work when Setup is run from Windows 3.x. If Subst.exe is running, a warning appears. In MS-DOS, the warning does not appear if the switch is used. /ih - This switch causes Setup to run ScanDisk in the foreground. /iq - If you use the /is switch to bypass ScanDisk or ScanDisk fails, Setup checks your drive for cross-linked files. Use the /iq switch to prevent Setup from doing this. PARTNER: /ir - This switch is undocumented and should be discussed with customers only on a need-to-know basis. This switch tells Windows 95 Setup to not attempt to write to the boot sector. This switch is only to be used in the case where you cannot disable the built-in virus protection on your system. If you use this switch, your computer will not reboot at the end of Setup. To make your computer bootable, you must boot your computer with the Startup disk, SYS the hard disk, then boot your computer normally so that Setup can finish. Many Award BIOSes do not allow you to disable the built-in virus protection through the CMOS settings. According to Award, this limitation is not a limitation of the Award BIOS itself, but is rather a limitation that has been implemented by the motherboard manufacturer. For that reason, customers who are experiencing this problem should contact their computer manufacturer, not Award. Award BIOSes with the following date and serial numbers (Award BIOS version 4.50G, 4.50GP, or 4.50PG) are known to have this problem: - 4/13/95: 2A5L7F09, 214X2002, 2C403AB1 4/6/95: 2A5L7F09 - 9/26/94: 2C419S23 The BIOS date and serial number appear at the bottom of the screen after power on. /is - This switch causes Setup to not run ScanDisk. /IW - This switch allows you to bypass the license agreement screen and must be in capital letters. /l - Use this switch if you have a Logitech mouse and want it enabled during Setup. You must run Setup from your previous version of MS-DOS or start Windows 95 in MS-DOS mode for these switches to function. /n - This switch causes Setup to run without a mouse. /p - The /p switch causes Setup to pass string(s) directly to Detection Manager (or Sysdetmg.dll). Setup does not interpret the content of the string. The string can contain one or more detection options. The /p switch is not to be used by itself. For more information on the /p switch, please see the "/p Detection Switch Option String Defined" section below. -s - Use this switch to use an alternate Setup.inf file. /t:<dir> - This switch lets you to specify where Setup will copy its temporary files. WARNING: Any existing files in this directory will be deleted. /p Detection Switch Option String Defined ----------------------------------------- - The string can contain one or more detection switches separated by a semicolon (;). For example, if you want to use "/p f" and "/p i" you type "setup /p f;i". - Some switches are simply On/Off switches. The absence of the switch implies Off; the presence of the switch turns it On. A minus sign (-) appended immediately after a switch turns it Off. - Some switches take parameters in the form of <c>=<params>. If there is more than one parameter to a switch, the parameters are separated by a comma (,). - There must not be any spaces in the detection option string. Valid Detection Switches: a - This switch enables safe detection. It tells each detection module to try safer detection methods. Safer detection methods may not detect devices correctly. The default during Setup is enabled. The default in other cases is disabled. Example: setup /p a b - This switch enables Prompt Before mode. It prompts you before a detection module is called so that you can step through each detection module manually and decide if you want to skip it. The default is disabled. Example: setup /p b c - This switch enables class detection. Class detection is a mechanism for finding hints for a certain class of devices. For example, adapter class detection looks for hints in the Config.sys and System.ini files for CD-ROM drivers. If it does not find any, Setup displays a CD-ROM check box asking if you have a CD-ROM drive. The default during Setup is enabled. The default when you use the Add New Hardware tool and docking/undocking detection is disabled. Example: setup /p c c- - Setup /p c- disables safe class detection. For example, this switch tells Setup to always search on all network adapter cards, sound cards, and CD-ROM drives. Example: setup /p c- d=<name> - This switch detects the listed detection modules only, where <name> is a detection module name or a device class name. Detection module names (such as DetectPIC and DetectAHA154x) are found in the Msdet.inf file. Device class names can be SCSIAdapter, net, and so on. Example: setup /p d=detectpic e - This switch enables Setup mode detection. The default during Setup is enabled. The default in other cases is disabled. Example: setup /p e f - This switch enables Clean Registry mode. It
forces Detection to clean the root branch of the registry before
starting. This switch is ignored when Setup is run in the Windows
95 graphical user Example: setup /p f g=<n> - This switch specifies the verbose level, where <n> is 0 to 3. This switch controls how verbose the built-in progress bar is. At maximum level (3), it shows all the resources of the detected devices along with the progress bar. This switch can help to identify which detection module causes a certain problem. For example, if your mouse stops responding (hangs) during detection but the system continues, there is no way to determine from the log files which module hung the mouse. By turning this option on and constantly moving the mouse during Setup, you can determine which module is running when the mouse hangs. The default is disabled (0). Example: setup /p g=3 i - This switch tells Setup not to report the existence of a Plug and Play BIOS. It is useful on systems that have a Plug and Play BIOS that is not reported in Machine.inf. Example: setup /p i j - This switch tells Setup to undo the results of the "Setup /p i" switch. This switch should only be used after a machine that required "Setup /p i" has updated their Plug and Play BIOS. Example: setup /p j l=<n> - This switch specifies the logging level for Detlog.txt, where <n> is 0 to 3. The default is maximum logging (3). Example: setup /p l=0 m - This switch enables Mini-windows mode This is enabled only when Setup is run under MS-DOS. Example: setup /p m n - This switch enables No Recovery mode. This option can be used to turn off the Windows 95 Setup recovery mechanism (for example, this switch prevents the creation of the Detcrash.log file). The default is disabled. Example: setup /p n o=<traceoutput> - This switch specifies the trace output. The information is written to the Tracelog.txt file in the current directory. This option is available only in the Debug version of Sysdetmg.dll. Example: setup /p o p - This switch enables performance logging. It writes performance timing information to the DETLOG.TXT file. The default is disabled. Example: setup /p p r - This switch enables Recovery mode. It causes Detection to use the Detcrash.log file, if found, for recovery. If this switch is not enabled, Detection ignores and deletes Detcrash.log even if it is found. This switch is used if Smart Recovery is selected during Setup, otherwise it is not used. Example: setup /p r s=<name> - This switch skips the listed detection modules or classes of detection modules, where <name> is a detection module name or a device class name. Detection module names (such as DetectPIC and DetectAHA154x) are in the Msdet.inf file. Device class names are SCSIAdapter, net, and so on. Example: setup /p s=detectpic t=<n> - This switch specifies the trace level, where <n> is 0 to 9. The default is disabled (0). This option is available only in the Debug version of Sysdetmg.dll. Example: setup /p t=9 v - This switch enables Verify Only mode. Detection has two stages: 1. Verify existing devices in the registry. 2. Detect new devices. This switch tells Detection to perform only stage 1. This switch is used by the PCMCIA Wizard to verify legacy devices in the registry. The default is disabled. Example: setup /p v x=<res list> - This switch excludes the listed resources from detection, where <res list> is one of four possibilities: - io(xxx-yyy,xxx-yyy,...) - mem(xxxxx-yyyyy,xxxxx-yyyyy,...) - irq(x,y,z,...) - dma(x,y,z,...) This switch protects resources so that no detection modules can access them.Example: setup /p x=io(300-30f,240-24f) |