4.9 RegEdit Command-Line OptionsEven though I've been talking about using RegEdit as a standard Windows application, it also supports several command-line options that let you to import and export Registry data from scripts, batch files, or the command line. Both switches run RegEdit as a background process. The export process is quiet; the import process displays a completion dialog, just as it does when you use the RegistryImport Registry File...command. 4.9.1 Exporting DataYou tell RegEdit to export data with the /e command-line switch. The command looks like this: regedit /e targetFile [registryPath]
If you want to dump the contents of HKLM\Software\metrowerks to a file named warrior.reg, you can do it like this: regedit /e c:\dist\hklm\warrior.reg HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\metrowerks 4.9.2 Importing DataThe simplest way to import data using RegEdit is to specify the name of the file you want imported on the command line, like this: regedit warrior.reg RegEdit happily imports the file's entire contents and presents a confirmation dialog when done. Alternatively, you can force RegEdit to replace the entire contents of the Registry with a .REG file. RegEdit won't replace the keys that are dynamically built (such as HKLM\HARDWARE and HKDD), but everything else is fair game, so make sure the file you're loading has a complete set of Registry contents and that you have a current backup. To invoke this mode, use the /c switch, like this: regedit /c whole-enchilada.reg When you use the /c switch, you may get an odd dialog box accusing you of tampering with the product type. Windows NT 4.0 keeps a pair of threads running in the background; these threads do nothing more than watch HKLM\System\Setup\SystemPrefix and HKLM\System\CurrentControlSet\Control\ProductOptions\ProductType for changes and reverse any changes that occur. When you reload the entire Registry, the threads notice and present the warning dialog box because they're not smart enough to tell that the value isn't any different--just that someone tried to change it. (For more information on these threads and why they're there, see Andrew Schulman's article at ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/examples/windows/win95.update/ntnodiff.html .) |