All I got was a blinking cursor on the next line. I typed the command Bcdedit /enum | find "osdevice" + Enter exactly as typed in red including quotes but I received no feedback, no error, nothing. The message I received was " Boot files successfully created."Ģ. Type bcdboot C:\Windows /s P: /f uefi and press Enter. Under the label row, find the label SYSTEM_DRV and note its corresponding drive letter. I was able to perform the following steps successfully.
The drive letter after partition= is the drive letter of the Windows partition.ġ. The Bcdedit /enum | find "osdevice" command can be use to find out the drive letter of the Windows installed partition the output of the Bcdedit command is similar to this osdevice partition=D. The system partition contains boot files WinRE assigns the system partition the C: drive letter and the Windows installed partition will be assign any other drive letter usually D: drive letter is assign to Windows installed partition. When computer boots into Windows Recovery Environment (WinRE) environment the drive letter assign to Windows partition may not be C: drive letter because Windows 7, 8, 8.1 and 10 creates a separate system partition when it's installed from scratch. Please replace partition letter C: with Windows installed partition letter.
You may have to replace P: drive letter with SYSTEM_DRV labeled drive letter. Type bcdboot C:\Windows /s P: /f uefi and press Enter. Under the label row, find the label SYSTEM_DRV and note its corresponding drive letter. I think in your case SYSTEM_DRV is the System Reserved partition so i will use this partition drive letter with Bcdboot command. You will have to use Diskpart command to find out the System Reserved partition drive letter.