Windows xp sp3 opk




















Install Instructions To start the download, click the Download button and then do one of the following, or select another language from Change Language and then click Change.

Click Run to start the installation immediately. Click Save to copy the download to your computer for installation at a later time. Additional Information Other critical security updates are available: To find the latest security updates for you, visit Windows Update and click Express Install.

To have the latest security updates delivered directly to your computer, visit the Security At Home web site and follow the steps to ensure you're protected.

Related Resources Microsoft Security Bulletin. Double-click the Setupmgr. The first page of Setup Manager will appear. However, the functionality is the same. On the first page of Setup Manager, you can prepare the automated preinstallation of Windows XP on your destination computers the computers that you will sell to your customer.

Setup Manager will save the settings that you choose in a configuration set. To avoid seeing this page the next time you run Setup Manager, select the Skip this page next time check box. When you are ready to continue, click Next. Configuration Set On this page, create a new configuration set, or edit or copy an existing one. Because this is your first time running Setup Manager, you can choose to create a new configuration set.

To modify an existing configuration set 1. Click Edit or copy an existing configuration set. In the Existing configuration sets list, click the configuration set that you want to use, and then click Next.

If you select this option, you must download the source files and run Windows Setup. Completing this type of installation does not reseal the computer. The computer restarts into Audit mode. Reseal when finished: Based on the above installation mode, this mode automatically reseals the computer without enabling further customization.

To enable further customization after restart, select Factory. To restart into the default end-user experience either Windows Welcome or Mini-Setup, depending on the version of Windows that you install , select End user. Copy files only: This installation mode provides you access to the command prompt after the file-copying portion of Setup finishes and before first-boot processing occurs.

You have the option of disk duplication and other customization. By default, auditing is not set in this mode. Resealing is the last step in the preinstallation process.

It prepares the computer for delivery to the end user and sets the computer to start into either Windows Welcome or Mini-Setup depending upon the Windows product that you install.

You are required to reseal the computer before delivering it to the end user. Location of Settings The settings from this page are saved in this location: Winbom. To specify the target product 1. In the Products list, select the product that you want to install, and then click Next. Setup Manager will copy the product files to your computer.

When the destination computer runs Windows XP, branding information appears automatically in Control Panel, on the General tab of the System Properties dialog box. To specify your branding information 1. In the Manufacturer box, type your manufacturer name. This is required information. In the Model box, type the model of the computer. This is optional information. In the Provide information on how your customers can get support box, type how the end user can obtain support.

Spell all items exactly the way you want the text to appear in the product. Include telephone numbers and hours of operation for your technical support group. Include information for several countries or regions with a common language and different support information. Do not list Microsoft in the support information section—you are responsible for supporting Windows XP on all computers that your company ships.

Localize the required [Support Information] section in Oeminfo. Microsoft includes only an English U. Do not include any information, such as the version number of the Windows XP operating system that could change when the end user upgrades to the next version.

Do not include any information in the [Support Information] section that does not directly pertain to support. Location of Settings The settings from this page are saved in this location: Oeminfo. This Product Key will be set to blank when you reseal the computer for final shipment to the customer. Notes The Product Key setting is saved in the unattended installation file if you use Unattend. Preinstalled Applications Use this page to define entries that start application setup programs or.

The steps that you complete to preinstall other programs will differ depending on the program. To specify the programs to start during auditing 1. On the Preinstalled Applications page, click Add. The Add an Application dialog box will appear. In the Add an Application dialog box, in the Display name box, type the name of the application as you want it to appear in the user interface. If you want to specify a Universal Naming Convention UNC path, click Browse to find the location of the Windows Setup program in a folder on a mapped network drive or a local folder that is shared.

This command line sets up that program to run during auditing. The Standard installation mode automatically invokes auditing during the Windows XP preinstallation.

Click Advanced if you want to specify the type of setup program, restart the computer after installing, or select staging options.

Staging an application: If you want to install a particular application on most of your computers, consider including a staged version of the application in the master installation. To stage an application means to make all the files available locally. When an application is staged on the hard drive, the application setup program is required only to make the relevant changes in the registry, eliminating time-consuming copying of files.

On the Preinstalled Applications screen, you can also edit the preload parameters by selecting the item on the list and then clicking Edit. You can also change the order in which the setup programs run by selecting an item and clicking the arrow buttons to the right of the list to move that item.

To specify network access credentials for this configuration set only 1. Select the Specify credentials for connection to network resources in Factory mode check box. Type the password in the Password and Confirm password boxes. Important Type the user name and password that you created earlier for the application preinstallation phase for example, appuser. Specifying credentials for this configuration set does not change the credentials specified in the distribution share settings.

If you do not specify credentials for this configuration set, Setup Manager uses those specified in the distribution share settings. You can view or change the distribution share settings by clicking the Tools menu, and then clicking Distribution Share.

To set up the installation of Plus! You will see this only if you look at the Winbom. Make sure that all of your folders are shared and that the user account that you created has access to the shares. Important If you assign a static IP address, applications are not preinstalled, even though they are specified in the Winbom.

On this page, specify the logo file that you want to use. To specify a custom logo for System Properties 1. Create a bitmap file named Oemlogo. The bitmap must be x pixels in size.

Specify the path and file name for the logo bitmap. It is strongly recommended that you test your logo bitmap on the computer models and monitors that you ship to ensure that the logo appears the way you want.

Setup Manager saves the Oemlogo. Windows Setup copies the. Branding Opportunities On this page, customize the Windows Welcome screen with your own branding. To customize Windows Welcome 1.

Type your company name in the Company Name box exactly as you want it to appear on the Welcome and Finish pages.

Select the Add the following OEM logo to Windows Welcome check box, and then click Browse to specify the path and file name of the graphic file that you want to display. Your logo will appear in the upper-right corner of the Windows Welcome pages. Note It is recommended that you prepare the logo graphic before you run Setup Manager. Other requirements are noted in the table below. Location of logo display. If the image is larger than the specified dimension, Windows Welcome crops any additional pixels on the right-hand side or bottom of the image.

Location of Settings The settings from this page are saved in this location: Oobeinfo. System Settings On this page, choose the default settings for language, region, keyboard, and time zone. These settings are based on the language version of Windows XP that you install. Whether you use the defaults or other selections, you can select whether to enable the user to change the settings that you specified.

Some countries, regions, or locales may have more than one common language or multiple time zones, and some languages are used in more than one locale, country, or region. If you clear the Allow end user to change language, region, and keyboard settings or Allow end user to change time zone setting check boxes, then the pages for these settings do not display in Windows Welcome when the end user first runs Windows XP Home Edition or Windows XP Professional.

If you do not configure a specific time zone setting, the default time zone in Windows is set equal to the default for the language that Setup Manager is localized in. If you want the end user to specify a time zone, select the Allow end user to change time zone setting check box. Note If you use this page to change regional settings, you will not see the prepopulated settings when you run Sysprep in Audit mode.

However, when the end user completes Windows Welcome, the settings will be correctly prepopulated. Mouse Tutorial On this page, specify a custom mouse tutorial during Windows Welcome.

Otherwise, the default setting is no mouse tutorial for the end user. To specify a custom mouse tutorial 1. Click Use a custom mouse tutorial. Click Browse to specify the location of the folder containing the custom mouse tutorial files. Select the Check to see if USB input devices necessary for input are properly connected check box. Click Browse to specify the path to the folder containing the custom USB hardware files. You can also add a custom hardware tutorial.

The HTML file or files that comprise your tutorial let the end user verify that various hardware components operate as expected. For example, clicking a sound-check button can play an audio file. This is not intended to be a diagnostic tool. To detect custom hardware during Windows Welcome 1. Select the Enable custom OEM hardware check pages check box. Click Browse to specify the path to the folder containing the custom hardware detection files.

Click Browse to locate the files, and then click OK. Preconfigure Internet settings at the factory: Click this option if the computer must have an operational, ready-to-use Internet account already installed the first time the end user runs Windows XP Home Edition or Windows XP Professional.

In the Caption box, type the caption or label that will appear under the button when the end user displays both the text and the icon on the toolbar button.

The maximum recommended size is 10 characters. In the Action, script file, or executable file box, specify the script or executable file that will run when the end user clicks the toolbar button. In the Color icon box, specify a color icon that will appear on the toolbar button when the button is active.

This icon must be 20 x 20 pixels in size, and it must be in. In the Grayscale icon box, specify a grayscale icon that will appear on the toolbar button when the button is inactive. This icon must be 20 x 20 pixels in size. Select the Display this button on the toolbar by default check box if the toolbar button is active by default. Location of Settings The settings from this page are saved in this location: Unattend.

Internet Explorer can display a default home page, or you can specify a URL for your own page. To specify the home page URL 1. Select the When the user clicks Home, go to check box, and then type a URL in the corresponding text box. To do this, your computer must be connected to the Internet. The Search bar appears on the Explorer bar on the left side of the browser window when the end user clicks the Search button on the Internet Explorer toolbar.

This bar displays a search page and enables the end user to see the search query and result at the same time. The Search bar comes with a choice of search services. To specify the Search bar URL 1. Select the When the user clicks Search, go to check box, and then type a URL in the corresponding text box. In Internet Explorer, support information is available by clicking the Help menu and then clicking Online Support.

It is recommended that you develop a support page and make it available to your end users. To specify the Online support page URL 1. To add and edit URLs and folders in the Favorites list items list 1. Determine which sites you want to add to the lists, and how you want them structured. Create the icons that you want to associate with your URLs in the Favorites list, and place them on the reference system where you want them to reside. Important The icons must be in.

It seems that the file is digitally signed. How do I patch the syssetup. Update: I tried copying the syssetup. I can't find a patched syssetup. Apply it to a Windows source, then pull the file from the source once patched.

Post by harkaz » Thu Sep 12, pm Thanks for the link. I will retry on a real XP SP3 machine and update this post. But now Windows XP Setup shows messages about installing unsigned drivers. Is there something wrong I'm doing? Is there a way to avoid this? I also had this problem with a manual patch I did. The only modification I've made is to comment out the msmsgs.

To turn OFF the Digital signature do these steps:- 1. This will disable the Digital Signature. SIF and adding these lines is not a solution for a service pack, because it has to be as generic as possible. Kelsenellenelvian: It seems I have 3 options here: 1. Find a different patch for syssetup. Don't modify syssetup. Abandon the project, as you did.

I will start with number 1 to see if I can do something. A kernel debugger may be useful. Have you tried this before? I will start working on it. My goal right now is to understand how pSetupVerifyFile works and change its parameters, not to prevent calling it. Code: Select all 1. The Setuapi. Post by bphlpt » Fri Sep 13, pm It's been a looooong time since I've done assembly work, and I could be totally wrong, but it seems like it might be easiest to just change the jz to a jmp, ie always jump, not just if zero.

Unless I'm missing something? Cheers and Regards. Post by harkaz » Fri Sep 13, pm I will try your suggestion bphlpt, this seems to be the solution. However, I have a practical problem: How do I get the hex code machine code after changing jz to jmp?

This is essential to know in order to patch the syssetup. Should I go trial and error? I'm testing it right now. Will report back soon. Post by bphlpt » Fri Sep 13, pm Of course if the file you patched is also digitally signed, then Good luck! Post by harkaz » Fri Sep 13, pm It failed The same error message appears Let's start from scratch I haven't used a kernel debugger so far For the moment, I'll work on the existing patch. I will try to fix this later. Post by bphlpt » Fri Sep 13, pm Isn't this the same kind of error that OnePiece mentions here?

Integration side effects not UpdatePack bugs : setuperr. Please note that in some rare configurations the integration of this addon could cause issues, so we don't suggest to use it. Post by harkaz » Sat Sep 14, pm Thanks for the tip, bphlpt, I'll check this later. Is this normal? Currently working hard on the "Battery unsigned" problem. I'm making progress: I have been able to reproduce the problem I faced with the original patch with the new one I applied yesterday.

I'm confident I'll find the solution. Can someone help me debug it to find its region in EXE? Note: This is the region which, if changed, causes all catalogs not to be recognised correctly. This seems to be independent of battery, however. Post by harkaz » Sun Sep 15, am Making progress: With a second patch, I managed to completely remove Messenger its catalog was manually removed by me in syssetup.

So it seems that this patch is required for some changes in syssetup. Now, the final step is removing the "Battery unsigned issue". Post by harkaz » Sun Sep 15, pm Fixed the "Battery unsigned" issue, will perfrom some additional checks before giving you the essential details. How to properly patch syssetup. Grab the original XP SP3 syssetup. Using a hex editor, like XVI32, open the dll file.

Go to address offset 33B7B. Replace 74 with EB. Save changes to syssetup. Using modifype -c command or a similar tool fix the PE checksum. To get rid of the "Battery unsigned" issue, you have to perform this additional step: Open the syssetup.

Delete or comment the line with the battery. Save changes. Use the new syssetup. Known side-effects: Setuperr. In addition, SFC does not protect syssetup. However, SFC does not report any problems after Windows installation. Waiting for your comments after testing the new patch. Time to return to my SP4 project.



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