![]() I guess whoever built it wanted to do things clean but I don't master this variant of the OS at all. I don't know if that changes anything, but the server was running Windows 7 Embedded. Especially since after a blue screen, I have the choice of the boot mode I want (safe mode, etc.). If there was a boot problem, I would get an error message like "no OS found" or something like that and the Windows logo would not appear. ![]() The results I could find on the internet speak of a boot problem, but the Windows logo appears so I don't think that's the case with my problem. So I used a bootable USB key and Northon Ghost (12.) to make an image of the server's hard drive, I installed VMWare on a PC running Windows 10 pro (i7 10 875H, 16 GB RAM, 1TB NVME SSD ). ![]() The current technical characteristics are as follows: It is true that the question of security may arise as to the fact of keeping an outdated OS, but the server operates in a small dedicated LAN which greatly limits the problem. It would be impossible to rebuild (software) the server from scratch, there is no documentation left on how the software and the scripts running on it work so I thought about virtualizing it, so we wouldn't be dependent on physical media anymore. It is essential for our daily activity but its equipment is beginning to show signs of fatigue and in the event of a serious breakdown, it will be impossible to replace it. This was set up about ten years ago by an enthusiast who is no longer present today. I work in a small company and we have a server that is essential for our activity. ![]() (sorry for my english, this is a 95% google tradâ–¡)
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