Boot sequence for Windows
NT, 2000, XP and 2003:
BIOS: performs Power On
Self Test (POST)
BIOS: loads MBR from the boot device specified/selected by the BIOS
MBR: contains a small amount of code that reads the partition table, the
first partition marked as active is determined to be the system volume
MBR: loads the boot sector from the system volume
BOOT SECTOR: reads the root directory of the system volume at loads
NTLDR
NTLDR: reads BOOT.INI from the system volume to determine the boot drive
(presenting a menu if more than 1 entry is defined)
NTLDR: loads and executes NTDETECT.COM from the system volume to perform
BIOS hardware detection
NTLDR: loads NTOSKRNL.EXE, HAL.DLL, BOOTVID.DLL (and KDCOM.DLL for XP
upwards) from the boot (Windows) volume
NTLDR: loads \WINDOWS\SYSTEM32\CONFIG\SYSTEM which becomes the system
hive HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System
NTLDR: loads drivers flagged as "boot" defined in the system
hive, then passes control to NTOSKRNL.EXE
NTOSKRNL.EXE: brings up the loading splash screen and initializes the
kernel subsystem
NTOSKRNL.EXE: starts the boot-start drivers and then loads & starts
the system-start drivers
NTOSKRNL.EXE: creates the Session Manager process (SMSS.EXE)
SMSS.EXE: runs any programs specified in BootExecute (e.g. AUTOCHK, the
native API version of CHKDSK)
SMSS.EXE: processes any delayed move/rename operations from
hotfixes/service packs replacing in-use system files
SMSS.EXE: initializes the paging file(s) and the remaining registry
hives
**
before this step completes, bugchecks will not result in a memory dump as we
need a working page file on the boot (Windows) volume **
SMSS.EXE: starts the kernel-mode portion of the Win32 subsystem
(WIN32K.SYS)
SMSS.EXE: starts the user-mode portion of the Win32 subsystem
(CSRSS.EXE)
SMSS.EXE: starts WINLOGON.EXE
WINLOGON.EXE: starts the Local Security Authority (LSASS.EXE)
WINLOGON.EXE: loads the Graphical User Identification and Authentication
DLL (MSGINA.DLL by default)
WINLOGON.EXE: displays the logon window
WINLOGON.EXE: starts the services controller (SERVICES.EXE)
**
at this point users can logon **
SERVICES.EXE: starts all services markes as automatic
---------
NOTES:
The SYSTEM volume is the partition from which the boot process starts,
containing the MBR, boot sector, NTLDR, NTDETECT.COM & BOOT.INI
The BOOT volume is the partition which contains the Windows folder -
this can be a logical partition
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thanks a lot it has really help me
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