Safe mode starts Windows in a basic state, using a limited set of files and drivers. If a problem doesn't happen in safe mode, this means that default settings and basic device drivers aren't causing the issue. Observing Windows in safe mode enables you to narrow down the source of a problem, and can help you troubleshoot problems on your PC.

There are two versions of safe mode: Safe Mode and Safe Mode with Networking. Safe Mode with Networking adds the network drivers and services you'll need to access the internet and other computers on your network.


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After your PC restarts, you'll see a list of options. Select 4 or F4 to start your PC in safe mode. Or if you'll need to use the internet, select 5 or F5 for Safe Mode with Networking.

I have a program and once the is button clicked I want a message to appear that will tell user that the computer is rebooting (with ok/cancel option), then the computer will reboot. Yet the kicker is, I want it to reboot into safe mode. Then when the user is logged into safe mode, it will automatically start a program on startup.

Now I realize that this is possible by programmatically editing boot.ini with /safemode, task to start program once computer logs in,then telling the computer to reboot.However, the end user is assumed to have not enough knowledge of Windows to reverse these settings manually.

What I want is, after the end user is done with the program in Windows Safe Mode, they can simply reboot the computer and resume using Windows with out manually changing any settings to the way they were before booting into safe mode.

NOTE* the program that will run in safe mode, has been tested to work in safe mode. I just need to know how to get the end user to safe mode and run the program automatically with out the end user having any knowledge of how to reverse these settings.

While I can easily reboot the first one from the menus (Advanced, Administration, Router Status, Reboot button), the second one which is in a bridged mode, lacks this. Instead there is basic info about the bridges.

I also use an R7000 in bridge mode and there are numerous basic settings that you lose access to from the web interface (e.g. reboot button, changing the time zone, setting up log e-mails). Your options for rebooting the R7000 in bridge mode are: 1) Use the on/off button, 2) Use the Netgear Genie mobile app, 3) Use the Netgear Genie Windows app.

Can you tell how fast the wireless speed as both were using in bridge mode. AC speed actual practical In MB/s i heard this router topped Smallnet builder and bought one but i could get best wifi speed but not satifiying transfer speed for local transfer as they do in single digit MB's i want double digit maximum for easy copy and backup.

Can you please post the snaps on connectivity part and how to setup both in bridge. I do saw that bridge mode but will the send router in bridge will obviously loose wifi then how come its feasible to reboot via genie.

I posted about some issues saving settings on an ESXi 6.0 host previously, and just now rebooted the host itself to test the save. The host came up in maintenance mode, which it was not in when I restarted it.

Curious, I rebooted again and it came up in maintenance mode again. After some searching, I ran some commands on the host such as vim-cmd /hostsvc/hostsummary | grep inMaintenanceMode and confirm it is not actually in maintenance mode. Nonetheless, another reboot and the host is back to all the old settings and in maintenance mode. Has anyone experienced this?

*Especially* when hitting the rebooting to safe mode option.


And extra, extra, extra, exxxttrraaaa especially when connecting via the mobile app. Or at least rebooting to safe mode when no user is logged in or the console is locked.



I realize that the theory is that the machine's going to reboot into safe mode with networking. After which the control agent will come online again, and you can reboot back into normal mode from there. 


However, that's not guaranteed. At least one of the times I've accidentally hit reboot into safe mode, the agent never came back online. 


Thankfully in that case I had the client physically reboot it. And thankfully in the case of my EC2 instance, rebooting through the AWS management console brought it back into normal mode. But regardless, there needs to be at least one extra "are you sure??!?" before things actually reboot.

So I'm currently working on a product on the stm32f4 and we're trying to implement a simple firmware upgrade. The first solution that we used was to have a link on the board that you could use to connect BOOT0 to VD and then trigger a power cycle and when the device reboots it would boot up into DFU mode. This works but has the disadvantage that to access the link you have to unscrew the back of the device which isn't ideal when you are asking a customer to do it.

The next option was to have a USB command that we recognise in our code which sets a value (DEADBEEF) to a register address and then trigger a software restart, then upon startup that address is checked and if it is set it will force the uC into DFU mode.

This second method is much better other than the small issue that occurs due to the face that we enable read protection on the chip. as part of the upgrade process, we have to erase the flash once this has finished the chip reboots however as the 'DEADBEEF' has been cleared it doesn't boot into DFU mode.

After changing a few lines in xorg.conf, I can no longer boot Ubuntu (I assume it breaks when trying to load up X), so I need a way to boot into a single-user mode. However, there seems to be zero guides on the Internet how to do it, because they all assume I can actually edit files on my computer, and I obviously can't.

Note: These changes are not persistent. Any change to the kernel boot options made this way will only affect the next boot and only if you start that boot by pressing either Ctrl+X or F10 while still in GRUB edit mode.

I need to change selinux to "permissive mode" on a production server without a reboot, but setenforce wont let me do it(as a root), it always prints "setenforce: SELinux is disabled" What i'm doing wrong?

In general, install Windows using the newer UEFI mode, as it includes more security features than the legacy BIOS mode. If you're booting from a network that only supports BIOS, you'll need to boot to legacy BIOS mode.

You might see separate commands for the same device. For example, you might see UEFI USB Drive and BIOS USB Drive. Each command uses the same device and media, but boots the PC in a different firmware mode.

Some devices only support one mode (either UEFI or BIOS). Other devices will only allow you to boot to BIOS mode by manually disabling the UEFI security features. To disable the security features, go to Security > Secure Boot and disable the feature.

If you want to ensure that your drive boots into a certain mode, use drives that you've preformatted with the GPT file format for UEFI mode, or the MBR file format for BIOS mode. When the installation starts, if the PC is booted to the wrong mode, Windows installation will fail. To fix this, restart the PC in the correct firmware mode.

If you want a PC to only boot into a certain mode, you can remove the files that Windows PE or Windows Setup use to boot in UEFI or BIOS mode. Remove the following files, depending on the mode you want to boot to.

If I select first option in boot menu it stuck at loading ../bzroot. Even if I select Safe Mode (no GUI) it stuck at the same step. However, if I select a boot option with GUI mode then I can continue to the completion and can access unRAID dashboard.

This happens with some motherboards to some users, i.e., another user with the exact same model may not have any issues, Supermicro X11 series was some of the most affected, sometimes a bios update can help.

I did reset my BIOS and boot again and this time it started with the first option (unRAID OS) for the first time, and then I restarted and it stuck at the same place. Can't understand why it works for the first time and even with GUI mode but not default. Does unRAID modify BIOS settings once loaded? I really wanted to try unRAID hence I built this new machine. Looks like I have to try with different NAS OS

There is no significant downside that I know of in booting in GUI mode even if you have no monitor attached. A minor downside might be that gui mode needs slightly more RAM to run but this is unlikely to be an issue if you have 2GB or more of RAM and any modern system has at least that.

Quite why this works for some people where the non-gui mode does not work is not at all clear. It feels like it must be some sort of race condition deep inside the Linux kernel level and the gui mode changes the timing enough for thins to work.

Thanks @itimpi for the reply, I just tried 6.3.4 and it's giving me the same issue, GUI mode fine but console mode just stuck at the same step. Yeah I have 8GB DDR4 2400 attached so I guess it won't be a problem in memory wise, but it just makes me bit nervous when thinking something is not right somewhere. Who knows what else come up after getting the license and playing with VM, docker etc. I don't know what else to do as I already tried whatever possible. I even tried upgrading MOBO BIOS but it is already with the latest version. (AsROCK B250M Pro 4) e24fc04721

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