XP Home recovering user account

Locked
User avatar
Foo
Posts: 13840
Joined: Thu Aug 03, 2000 7:00 am
Location: New Zealand

XP Home recovering user account

Post by Foo »

I'm working on a friend's PC and the windows install got completelty fucked.

I've installed a fresh copy of windows directly over the old one.

...only then to find that some of the user account were passworded and the documents folders were private.

I need to get back into those folders. I know there's a method via the recovery console becuase it gives you superbastard(tm) control over everything... but I dont know the finer points and I'm too dumb to make a decent google search string to get the answers.

Anyone able to give me the rundown or point me to a good guide?
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
+JuggerNaut+
Posts: 22175
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am

Post by +JuggerNaut+ »

can't you just reset the passwords to those accounts and start digging?
zolborg
Posts: 110
Joined: Fri Dec 20, 2002 8:00 am

Post by zolborg »

Take ownership of the files
Tormentius
Posts: 4108
Joined: Sat Dec 14, 2002 8:00 am

Post by Tormentius »

zolborg wrote:Take ownership of the files
:icon14:
+JuggerNaut+
Posts: 22175
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am

Post by +JuggerNaut+ »

you can do that in recovery console? why not just reset admin password?
User avatar
Foo
Posts: 13840
Joined: Thu Aug 03, 2000 7:00 am
Location: New Zealand

Post by Foo »

I should have been more specific. This was XP home.

The right procedure was:
* reboot into safe mode
* Take ownership of the user profiles in NTFS permissions
* copy files to new user profile folders
* reboot

XP Home's NTFS file permissions limitations are such a crock of shit.
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
zolborg
Posts: 110
Joined: Fri Dec 20, 2002 8:00 am

Post by zolborg »

+JuggerNaut+ wrote:you can do that in recovery console? why not just reset admin password?


Because if there are any encrypted files, they will be lost by resetting the password.
User avatar
Foo
Posts: 13840
Joined: Thu Aug 03, 2000 7:00 am
Location: New Zealand

Post by Foo »

+JuggerNaut+ wrote:can't you just reset the passwords to those accounts and start digging?
When you reinstall windows, it creates new Administrator account and does not have any permissions on the old accounts. The old accounts are linked to the SID of the original Administrator account, and the new one has a different SID.

Same goes for the user accounts. Putting an identical user account back onto the new windows install results in a new profile being created called username.pcname, leaving the original folder untouched.

I dunno how common it is for people to get in this situation, but making it so awkward to get out of sucks.
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
+JuggerNaut+
Posts: 22175
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am

Post by +JuggerNaut+ »

egads, good to know.
dzjepp
Posts: 12839
Joined: Wed Mar 28, 2001 8:00 am

Post by dzjepp »

Hmmm, microsoft copyprofile tool seems to do the job.
User avatar
Foo
Posts: 13840
Joined: Thu Aug 03, 2000 7:00 am
Location: New Zealand

Post by Foo »

dzjepp wrote:Hmmm, microsoft copyprofile tool seems to do the job.
NUp. Copyprofile will only take a profile if the user has NTFS access to the files - without that access it won't/can't get in to copy the files.
"Maybe you have some bird ideas. Maybe that’s the best you can do."
― Terry A. Davis
Cooldown
Posts: 660
Joined: Mon Jun 05, 2000 7:00 am

Post by Cooldown »

use a hammer :D
+JuggerNaut+
Posts: 22175
Joined: Sun Oct 14, 2001 7:00 am

Post by +JuggerNaut+ »

Cooldown wrote:use a hammer :D
we knew you were all copy and paste
Locked