![]() Upon running this command, I saw an Element not found error, suggesting that there were no Windows installs at all! This obviously was not correct, however - the partition could be mounted and everything was still there. Since my Windows Server 2008 R2 partition likely had the BOOTMGR code on it, perhaps it wasn’t the MBR that needed to be fixed. This operation completed without issue, but it didn’t solve my issue - Windows still would not get to a bootloader. ![]() In my scenario, it was possible that the bootloader on the Master Boot Record of the disk was missing after the change in partition layout, so this was the first command I used.
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