Computer Recovery Partition Question

Hello! I have a question for you, there is a program called verifier on the computer. And as we know, this program gives BSOD every time we turn on the computer to find faulty drivers. However, when we enter the following commands, will the computer not automatically go to the recovery partition:

bcdedit /set {default} bootstatuspolicy IgnoreAllFailures

bcdedit /set {default} recoveryenabled No

What I mean is, if we run both verifier and enter these two cmd commands, will the computer give BSOD every time it starts and will it never go to the recovery partition? Or will it? Please help me with this.

Or give me a solution (other than format)

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

NOTE:[(I asked this just for the sake of asking, of course, as I said, I didn't do anything like that, but I'm just curious about what could happen if I did)]"

|
Hello, thank you for reaching out to the Microsoft Community. I'm here to help with your questions or issues. Just note – this is a place where passionate Microsoft users help each other, we don't work directly for Microsoft.

You are correct, since you’ve disabled the recovery environment and told the system to ignore boot failures, it won’t automatically boot into the recovery partition.

I want to think that you’re testing drivers, and they’re causing BSODs, which then send you to recovery. You’re trying to skip that recovery step and just keep testing the drivers without interruptions, right?

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

No, for example, let's think about it this way outside of this incident:

The computer constantly gives BSOD, and does not automatically go to the recovery section.

Is it possible to solve this with USB special settings, for example? Please help with this.

[---> MOVELESSMOVE <--- ]
******************************

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

You can go to recovery mode if you have a Windows Media USB, if that's what you are asking.

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

So as far as I understand it is like this:

If I have Windows Media USB, I can go to the recovery section. There is no other way. So if I select Windows Media USB from the boot section in the motherboard settings and start it like that, I will go to the recovery section directly, right?

Is what I said true? So if I have Windows Media USB, I can fix it by constantly going to the recovery section from BSOD without formatting, right? (So even if the auto-recovery partition is disabled?)

[---> MOVELESSMOVE <--- ]
******************************

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

Windows has a tool: Windows Driver Verifier (WDV).

The tool can be used to find problematic drivers.

The tool has settings to choose tests and to choose drivers as well as automatic settings.

When the tool is turned on it will test whatever was selected in the menu.

It can run without causing crashes.

The typical goal is to select settings that cause problematic drivers to crash and create dump files. The dump files are then debugged.

The tool can run indefinitely until it is turned off. The tool is turned off by booting into Windows Recovery Environment. Then opening command prompt to run commands that turn off the tool. If the typical commands fail to turn off the tool then a system restore is performed.

Again the typical goal is to select tests that cause WDV BSODs and then debug dump files.

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

Indeed, that would be correct. You can use the Windows Media USB as a recovery mode.

Was this reply helpful?

Sorry this didn't help.

Great! Thanks for your feedback.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site.

How satisfied are you with this reply?

Thanks for your feedback.

 
 

Question Info


Last updated April 17, 2025 Views 29 Applies to: