missing driver in universal restore
I am trying to do a universal restore from and old win10 hp computer to a new one. I get missing driver
PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_A12F&SUBSYS_82F1103C&REV_31 for WIN10
What driver is this and where do I find it?
Regards
Lars


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Thank you very much for your answer. I downloaded the Intel(R)_USB_3.0_eXtensible_Host_Controller_Driver_5.0.4.43.
But when I run the media builder and have added the inf files from the driver package and continue with proceed I get an error:
Code: 262 158(0x0004000E)
LineInfo: 0x6983D207431790EE;
Module: universal_restore_media_builder_vs_40067
I have no idea what I have been doing wrong?
Regards
Lars
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Lars, looking at webpage: https://downloadcenter.intel.com/product/65855/Intel-USB-3-0-eXtensible… this device driver is not applicable to Windows 10.
I am not sure that this is the reason for the error when creating the AUR media that you see but you should not need add this type of driver in the AUR media as it should not be required to allow the computer to boot into Windows 10.
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Lars,
Are you upgrading from and MBR/BIOS system on your old computer, the one that you created the backup on to a dissimilar UEFI booted computer? I have found one reference to your error code which references this scenario. I do agree with Steve here on not using the driver you mention. USB drivers can and should be installed in a running Windows system using Device Manager. Your main driver concerns with AUR are motherboard chipset and storage controller drivers. Beyond that you should not need anything further.
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Enchantec and Steve,
thank you for your input. I am indeed moving from an old MBR/BIOS to a UEFI computer. The problem is that when I run the UR I get stuck on the message with the missing driver and cannot get pass it.
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Is the Windows OS you are moving Win 7 or Win 10? If Win 10 you probably will not need to run UR at all, if Win 7 you might need storage drivers if you are moving from IDE to SATA.
When you restored your backup to the disk I suppose you did this on your old machine?
Have you tried to boot the new machine from the Acronis True Image Recovery Media?
If you restored your backup image to the disk in the old machine your problem is that you did so as an MBR/BIOS install. This will not work on a UEFI/GPT machine. Ideally you should setup the new machine bios as UEFI boot, start the machine with the True Image Recovery Media and restore your backup to the disk attached to this new machine.
When you get to the final stage of the restore you will see a warning message at the bottom of the screen telling you that the disk will be converted to UEFI/GPT. I would say you did not see this message when you restored the image to the disk at this point.
Once you have the image restored then shutdown the machine, remove the boot media, make sure the the boot order in the machine bios setup is set for Windows Boot Manager not to the actual drive itself to boot the machine, save and exit the bios setup and see if the machine will boot. If this is a Win 10 install it should.
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Both the old and new machine is win 10. The thought has occured to me that I should try to just restore to the disk in the new machine. The new machine is delivered with a win 10 system on an SSD disk. I do not want to destroy this, but my idea was to restore the backup from the old win 10 pro to the other disk and then try to make it a dual boot machine. The old machine has crashed and is not working any longer. I will probably not have time to test this now as Christmas is approching fast but all good advice is very welcome indeed.
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Since you have Win 10 the deal is that in going from MBR/BIOS to UEFI/GPT you need to boot the Recovery Media in the correct mode to perform the restore operation. If you do not then the restore will be unable to boot. So you will need to do this on the new machine when it arrives so the you can have a machine booted as UEFI to perform the restore which when you do True Image will convert the backup image from MBR/BIOS to UEFI/GPT for you. With that done the restored disk will boot and in my experience with Win 10 no UR necessary. Once booted just update all device drivers using Device Manager.
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I restored the backup to the second disk (non-ssd) on the new machine. The machine then booted to the win 10 on the ssd disk. I tried boot the repair options on the machine to see if I could let the system identify the second windows system on the second disk and make it bootable. But now I only get a screen saying "Your PC needs to be repaired and error 0xc0000225". The strange thing is that when I boot with the win 10 installation disk I do not get to the repair options but get the same error screen. But if I boot normally I get to the win 10 system on the ssd disk.
Confused.
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Additional info.
I made a restore of a backup of the system of the SSD disk made before the restore to the second disk hoping that this would restore the system. But unfortunately nothing changed.
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Lars, when you did the restore to the second disk drive, did you also do the MBR to GPT / BIOS to UEFI conversion by booting the Acronis Rescue Media in UEFI mode?
Trying to get the new computer running in a dual-boot OS mode is a lot more complex than just restoring the second OS to another drive, especially when this is also different hardware to that used by that second OS from the old computer.
I would recommend removing the Windows 10 SSD drive from the new computer and trying to get your restored OS working on its own on the second drive before trying anything else. Again, the restore needs to be done as required by the new computer BIOS, so unless you can configure this to allow both Legacy/CSM and UEFI booting, this will need to be in UEFI mode.
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No I amafraid I did not do that because I did not know how to do it. I will see what I can do, Thank You.
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When you boot from the Acronis Rescue media - on the boot device selection screen, look for an entry with UEFI in the name for the USB device or CD/DVD where the media is to be booted from. When doing the Restore you should get a warning advising you that this conversion will be done if your proceed.
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Did you remove the disk containing the Win OS which cam with the machine before you attempted to boot to the disk that recovered your backup image to? You must only have 1 Windows OS disk in the machine at a time.
The 0xc0000225 error is what you get when there are 2 disks in the machine that have Windows installed on them.
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