Administrator password

  • Thread starter Thread starter Arun
  • Start date Start date
A

Arun

Am using Win XP Professional.I forgot my administrator password.How to
retrieve it without doing format?
 
You might be able to retrieve it with ophcrack
http://ophcrack.sourceforge.net/ The Live CD version can reveal
unsophisticated passwords without the need to blank them out.
However if it doesn't work then you can blank the password using a program
like this one
http://www.webtree.ca/windowsxp/tools/ntpassword/ntpasswordhack.zip

--

Xandros


"Arun" <Arun@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:E625C7E8-417A-47A0-BE9E-D9132E648FA1@microsoft.com...
> Am using Win XP Professional.I forgot my administrator password.How to
> retrieve it without doing format?
 

>> Am using Win XP Professional.I forgot my administrator password.How to
>> retrieve it without doing format?



"Meinolf Weber" <meiweb(nospam)@gmx.de> wrote in message
news:ff16fb669eda28ca939df42963c4@msnews.microsoft.com...
> Hello Arun,
> See here:
> http://home.eunet.no/~pnordahl/ntpasswd/
> Best regards
> Meinolf Weber



Arun:
The website Meinolf directed you to has a freely available program that you
can download and then create a bootable CD that will allow you to reset your
password. We prepared some step-by-step instructions for using this program
for some local PC users. Hopefully it will be of some use to you (or others
interested in this issue)...

1. On the top of the webpage click on the "Bootdisk" button.
2. In the "Download" section of that page click on the cd070927.zip file and
download it to your Desktop. Note it's a ZIP file so the contents of that
file will have to be extracted.
3. I assume you know how to do this by merely right-clicking on the ZIP
file, click on Extract All, Next, Next, Finish.
4. A folder will be created on your Desktop titled "cd070927".
5. Inside that folder will be the cd070927.iso file. It's this .iso file
that allows you to create a bootable CD from that .iso image.
6. Hopefully, you have a CD-burning program, e.g., Nero, Roxio, etc., that
allows you to merely double-click on the .iso file and the CD-burning
program will open and proceeds to create a bootable CD from that .iso image.
If you don't have such a program perhaps you have a friend or acquaintance
who does and he or she can help you with creating the bootable CD. There are
other programs available on the net that allow you to do this as well but
these third-party programs that I've mentioned make it a very simple &
straightforward process.

Now that you've created the bootable CD that's designed to reset your
password, insert the CD in your optical drive and boot to it.

The following are step-by-step instructions for using the program. The
example involved assumes you are working with a single-partitioned HDD, but
the basic steps are the same for any size HDD, except where the drive is
multi-partitioned. If the latter is the case the steps will be slightly
different but they will not be unduly complicated or substantially different
under those circumstances.

As you progress through the screens the information provided and steps
involved look more complicated than they really are. In virtually every step
during the process you, as the user, will simply be pressing the Enter key
or some other simple keystroke. So don't be unduly concerned as you look
through the following. Relax, and take your time during the process.

1. Hopefully your PC is set up so that it will boot to a bootable CD. If
it's not, change the motherboard's BIOS boot priority setting so that the
CD-ROM is first in boot priority.

2. Boot to the password reset CD. At the first screen you will see the
"boot:" prompt. Press Enter.

3. The next prompt ("Step ONE") will be "Select: [1]". Press Enter.

4. The next prompt ("Step TWO") will be "What is the path to the registry
directory? (relative to windows disk)
[WINDOWS/system32/config]:". Again, press Enter.

5. The next prompt will follow text "Select which part of registry to load,
use ..." and list three options. The default prompt will reflect the first
option ("Password reset ..."), indicating "[1]". Again, simply press Enter.

6. The next prompt at "Step THREE" will indicate "What to do? [1]". Again,
press Enter.

7. A bunch of information will follow with the final line displaying the
prompt, "or simply enter the username to change [Administrator]". Type your
user name, e.g., ARUN, and press Enter. Ensure you've correctly entered your
user name in the proper case (uppercase or lowercase as you have originally
set it).

8. More information will follow ending with the following prompt...
"Please enter new password:". Type an * (asterisk or star) and press Enter.

9. The next prompt will be...
"Do you really wish to change it? (y/n) [n]". Type y and press Enter.
(You'll receive the confirmation "Changed!")

10. The last line of the following prompt will read...
"or simply enter the username to change [Administrator]". Type !
(exclamation point) and press Enter.

11. The last line of the next prompt will read...
"What to do? [1]" . Type q and press Enter.

12. The next prompt ("Step FOUR") will read...
"About to write file(s) back! Do it? [n]". Type y and press Enter.

13. At this point you should get the "EDIT COMPLETE" message with the
following prompt...
"You can try again if it somehow failed, or you selected wrong New run? [n]"
Just press Enter.

14. The final prompt will be a "#" signaling that the program has finished
its work. Remove the CD from your optical drive and reboot.

Hopefully your Administrator's password has been reset to a blank password
and you should gain access to your system assuming that's the only problem
preventing you from booting to your system. Assuming you're able to do so
you can set a password of your choice and, of course, you'll be sure to make
a record of it, right?
Anna
 
"Arun" <Arun@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:E625C7E8-417A-47A0-BE9E-D9132E648FA1@microsoft.com...
> Am using Win XP Professional.I forgot my administrator password.How to
> retrieve it without doing format?


Generally it can't be retrieved, just reset.

Since you mention that you have XP Pro, which supports filesystem
encryption, it's prudent to mention that changing the password from outside
the account instantly renders any encrypted files associated with that
account, permanently undecryptable.

There are two exceptions to this that seldom apply. The first is that you
actually did back up the account certificates. The second is that you
specified a recovery agent. Neither of these are particularly common for
people who post here.

So before you change the password using an external utility, stop and
consider carefully whether you might have invoked encryption. If you did,
it's time to consider the options and implications of permanent data loss.

HTH
-pk
 
Patrick Keenan wrote:

> Generally it can't be retrieved, just reset.
>
> Since you mention that you have XP Pro, which supports filesystem
> encryption, it's prudent to mention that changing the password from
> outside the account instantly renders any encrypted files associated
> with that account, permanently undecryptable.
>
> There are two exceptions to this that seldom apply. The first is
> that you actually did back up the account certificates. The second
> is that you specified a recovery agent. Neither of these are
> particularly common for people who post here.
>
> So before you change the password using an external utility, stop and
> consider carefully whether you might have invoked encryption. If you
> did, it's time to consider the options and implications of permanent
> data loss.
>

In the same vain, most people who post here don't even "invoke
encryption" and so it may not be the time to consider any implications
of losing data because of using external utility!!
 
"ANONYMOUS" <ANONYMOUS@EXAMPLE.COM> wrote in message
news:O3qtttaxIHA.4488@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
>
>
> Patrick Keenan wrote:
>
>> Generally it can't be retrieved, just reset.
>>
>> Since you mention that you have XP Pro, which supports filesystem
>> encryption, it's prudent to mention that changing the password from
>> outside the account instantly renders any encrypted files associated with
>> that account, permanently undecryptable.
>>
>> There are two exceptions to this that seldom apply. The first is that
>> you actually did back up the account certificates. The second is that
>> you specified a recovery agent. Neither of these are particularly
>> common for people who post here.
>>
>> So before you change the password using an external utility, stop and
>> consider carefully whether you might have invoked encryption. If you
>> did, it's time to consider the options and implications of permanent data
>> loss.
>>

> In the same vain, most people who post here don't even "invoke encryption"
> and so it may not be the time to consider any implications of losing data
> because of using external utility!!


Unfortunately, that's the kind of thinking that leads directly to data loss.
It is *exactly* the time to consider consequences.

After you've permanently lost any chance of accessing your data is the wrong
time to think about the implications of your actions.

Questions about how to recover from exactly this kind of problem appear
regularly in this group.

The experience of seeing people permanently lose data because they didn't
understand the consequences of using these utilities does not incline me to
hide this information.


Hope this helps.
-pk
 
Back
Top