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You also have to know that the vmm32.vxd file that can be extracted from the Win9X cab files, is just a skeleton file that is used to build upon during the Win9X installation process, so just extracting it will not restore a corrupted vmm32.vxd file. So if your file gets corrupted you can't just copy the one from you buddy's system and expect it to work unless his system was 100% identical to yours at the time you each installed the exact same version of Win9X. One of the most important things about vmm32.vxd is that the actual *.vxd files it contains is determined for each system on an individual basis during the original Win9X installation to that system, and that the vmm32.vxd file on one system may be quite different than the one on another system. Between the stripped headers and the compression used in vmm32.vxd it is considerably smaller that all the individual files, contributing to its faster load time.
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Basically vmm32.vxd just contains a collection of different *.vxd files your system needs for startup, each file is stripped of the headers that are required if that same file was loaded separately.
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However, to keep things simple, you can think of it as a archive of different *.vxd files combined into one library file that can loaded as one file but that the individual files within it can be used as if they were individually loaded. It is a W4 format archive using the MRCI compression of Drivespace. Vmm32.vxd is a monolithic driver file made up of a number of various *.vxd files. To try and explain why what these sites tell you is wrong, you need to know what vmm32.vxd is. But even then he/she didn't know what they are talking about if they are saying a bug in Win9X prevents the *.vxd files from getting installed. A more forgiving reason (it you want to call it that), although unlikely based on the details of what is being said, is that it was started by a person whose vmm32.vxd file got corrupted. And as we all know, anything posted on the web spreads like wildfire and is taken to be gospel by many even if it shouldn't. It was probably originated by someone who doesn't/didn't have the slightest idea of what vmm32.vxd is or how it is used. Some go on to more explicitly tell you that if you see entries that look like C:\Windows\System\vmm32.vxd (configmg.vxd) that you do have to extract the *.vxd file manually from your Win98 CD cab files and put them in your \Windows\system\iosubsys directory after which the Driver File Details will show C:\Windows\System\configmg.vxd which is the correct way an entry should look.Īs I just said I think this whole issue is just plain old fashioned hogwash.
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Some of these sites go on even further to tell you that you can check to see if any *.vxd files are missing by using Device Manager (from System Manager in the Control Panel) and using the Driver File Details tab and that if you find entries containing 'vmm32', there's a good chance you need to extract and then install these files manually. My experience says that such sites are incorrectly informing you that during Win9X installation, some required *.vxd files do not get installed and that you have to install them yourself manually, and that these "missing" files are the cause of at least some of your problems. There are various web sites, such as where you can read about this non-existent bug that I think is plain hogwash. While it's possible that such a bug may have existed in a very early Win98 beta release (going back to when it was called Memphis and not Win98), there is no such bug, nor has there ever been such a bug in any released version of Win95 thru Win98 Second Edition.
#OREANS.VXD DRIVER DOWNLOAD HOW TO#
Everything in this article applies to all versions of Windows 9X including the recently released Windows 98 Second Edition versions.īefore I go into the details of telling you how to rebuild a corrupt vmm32.vxd file, let me first say with very strong emphasis that there is no truth to the reports that Win9X does not install all required *.vxd files during installation.