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bcdedit /import C:\BCD_Backup If the command line makes you nervous, Microsoft offers a GUI tool called Visual BCD Editor (from the Windows SDK). But honestly, mastering these 5 commands puts you in the top 10% of Windows troubleshooters.

bcdedit /enum This lists every boot entry on your machine. You’ll see {current} (your running OS), {default} (the one that boots automatically), and {memdiag} (Windows Memory Diagnostic). Look for the description field to identify your OS. bcedit

We’ll cover how to use BCEDIT to repair the EFI partition when Windows says “Boot device not found.” (Spoiler: It involves bootrec /rebuildbcd ). bcdedit /import C:\BCD_Backup If the command line makes

Open (or boot into Windows Recovery Environment). Here is your cheat sheet: You’ll see {current} (your running OS), {default} (the

BCEDIT (Boot Configuration Data Editor) is a command-line tool that manages the Boot Configuration Data (BCD) store. In older versions of Windows (XP and earlier), this was the boot.ini file. Today, the BCD store is a more robust, firmware-independent database that controls how Windows boots.

This creates a ntbtlog.txt file listing every driver that loads.