Windows Registry: Difference between revisions
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(→REGEDIT.EXE: Specify where keys get spaces) |
(→REGEDT16.EXE: Add location note) |
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This one comes with the 16-bit version of Internet Explorer 5.01. |
This one comes with the 16-bit version of Internet Explorer 5.01. |
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*This gets dumped into <code>%WINDIR%\SYSTEM</code> unlike the native <code>REGEDIT.EXE</code> |
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*The About dialog states this is for both Windows 3.1 and Windows NT 3.51. |
*The About dialog states this is for both Windows 3.1 and Windows NT 3.51. |
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*<code>HKEY_CURRENT_USER</code> and <code>HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE</code> are present too. |
*<code>HKEY_CURRENT_USER</code> and <code>HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE</code> are present too. |
Revision as of 04:57, 30 October 2023
The Windows Registry is a unnecessarily nested key-value store.
Windows for Workgroups 3.11
The following things were noticed after installing the 16-bit version of Internet Explorer 5.01.
REGEDIT.EXE
This one is bundled with the operating system. Run it with the /v
flag to make it actually usable.
- It only sees the type registrations (
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
inREGEDT16.EXE
). - In verbose mode, spaces in keys are replaced with
#
. - There is only one value per key (
(Default)
inREGEDT16.EXE
), and it is always a string. - A "Revert to Last Save" menu item exists.
- Data is stored in
%WINDIR%\REG.DAT
.[1] - Separate
REGEDIT.HLP
andREGEDITV.HLP
files exist. The latter is used for the Help menu when running in verbose mode. - Verbose mode takes significantly longer to start than standard mode.
REGEDT16.EXE
This one comes with the 16-bit version of Internet Explorer 5.01.
- This gets dumped into
%WINDIR%\SYSTEM
unlike the nativeREGEDIT.EXE
- The About dialog states this is for both Windows 3.1 and Windows NT 3.51.
HKEY_CURRENT_USER
andHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE
are present too.- String, Binary, and DWORD are the only types.
- Data is stored in
%WINDIR%\REG16X2.DAT
.[2] REG16X2.Enn
for 00-99 are created next to the file for each installation and uninstallation attempt.- The program starts significantly more quickly than
REGEDIT.EXE /V
.
Native .REG
file format
This section details the native format understood by Windows 3.1. 16-bit Internet Explorer 5.01 and the like instead use the newer REGEDIT4
format.
- The first line is
REGEDIT
with no version afterwards. Contrast this withREGEDIT4
andWindows Registry Editor Version 5.00
present in later versions. HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
is explicitly prepended to every key. Contrast this withREGEDIT.EXE /V
strongly implying that the root is that itself.- Every processed line has the format
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\path\to\key = Value of key
. - Lines that do not start with
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT
are ignored; no special character is needed to start a comment.[3] - If the
=
and value are omitted, the key is created without a value.
KB articles
- Q78346: Windows: Maximum Valid Size for REG.DAT and .INI Files
- Q80393: How to Rebuild the Default Windows REG.DAT File
- Q81530: Cannot Use How To Use Help in Registration Editor
- Q82144: REG.DAT May Need Update if Both Windows 3.0, 3.1 Installed
- Q82650: OLE: SETUP.REG Can Be Used to Repair REG.DAT
- Q82810: Where Windows Searches for REG.DAT
- Q82814: Re-Registering .REG Files
- Q82821: Registration Info Editor (REGEDIT) Command-Line Switches
- Q84791: Associating Files and Passing Command-Line Parameters
- Q85326: Windows Err Msg: Failed to Register Server
References
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows_Registry#Windows_3.11
- ↑ https://win31.de/etips.htm
- ↑
%WINDIR%\SYSTEM\SETUP.REG
line 4