How can I gain access to a
Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 computer if I forgot the
administrator's password? How can I reset the
administrator's password if I forgot it?
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Ok, so you say you forgot
your Windows administrator's password, huh? Oh well, it
doesn't really matter if you did or you just say you did.
The fact is that you need to gain access to a computer and
you cannot "remember" the administrator's password.
How can you get out of this
situation without formatting and re-installing the
operating system?
One method of
gaining access to the system is by trying hard to remember
the forgotten password, or a password of another user
which has the same level of administrative rights. However
I don't think this approach will help you, otherwise
you wouldn't be
sitting here reading article, would you?)
Another
method is by trying
to restore a backed up System State (in Windows
2000/XP/2003) or a ERD (in NT 4.0) in which you do
remember the password. The problem with doing so is that
you'll probably lose all of the recently add users and
groups, and all the changed passwords for all of your
users since the last backup was made.
A third
method might be to install a parallel operating system on
a different partition on the same computer, then use a
simple trick to gain access to the old system. Read more
about it on my
Forgot the Administrator's Password? -
Alternate Logon Trick article.
Note: If you are
looking for password cracking tools that can be used for
miscellaneous objectives such as password-protected PDF
documents, zipped archives, Office documents, BIOS
protection and so on then this pages is NOT for
you. See some links at the bottom of this page for hints
on where to find such tools, but I can tell you right away
that Google might be a better choice for you.
The fourth
option is by using 3rd party tools that will enable you to
reset the lost password and logon with a blank password.
Update:
You can also discuss these topics on the dedicated
Petri.co.il Forgot Admin Password Forum.
Translations of this article
There are
some translations made of this article. Here are the ones
I am aware of (do
tell me if
you know of another, or if you want to create one in your
language):
-
Portuguese
-
HERE is an excellent translation of this article
into Portuguese (by Bruno Koga - Thanks!)
-
Serbian -
HERE (by Aleksandar Stojilkovic - thanks!)
-
Spanish -
HERE (by Victor Pereyra - thanks!)
Free Tools
Here are some
of these tools:
Free Windows
password-cracking tools are usually Linux boot disks that
have NT file system (NTFS) drivers and software that will
read the registry and rewrite the password hashes for any
account including the Administrators. This process
requires physical access to the console and an available
floppy drive but it works like a charm! I've done it
myself several times with no glitch or problem whatsoever.
Beware!!!
Resetting a user's or administrator's password on some
systems (like Windows XP) might cause data loss,
especially EFS-encrypted files and saved passwords from
within Internet Explorer. To protect yourself against EFS-encrypted
files loss you should always export your Private and
Public key, along with the keys for the Recovery Agent
user. Please read more about EFS on my
What's EFS?
page. Out of the following list, the only tool that will
no cause any harm to EFS-encrypted files on your hard disk
is the Windows Password recovery system.
Here are 5 of these free
tools:
-
Windows Password recovery - Can
retrieve forgotten admin and users' passwords in
minutes. Safest possible option, does not write anything
to hard drive.
-
Petter
Nordahl-Hagen's Offline NT Password & Registry Editor
- A great boot CD/Floppy that can reset the local
administrator's password.
-
Openwall's
John the Ripper - Good boot floppy with cracking
capabilities.
-
EBCD –
Emergency Boot CD - Bootable CD, intended for system
recovery in the case of software or hardware faults.
-
Austrumi - Bootable CD for recovering
passwords and other cool tools.
If you happen to know about
other free tools please let me know
.
Note:
These password resetting tools are usually good for local
users on a stand alone computer. For Domain Admin password
resetting procedures please see the Related
Articles section at the bottom of this page.
Note: I'd like to put
together all the info you have about these issues. If you
have any tips, recommended links or any ideas about how to
figure out a lost password - please e-mail me and I'll get
back to you
.
Windows Password recovery
http://www.loginrecovery.com
This site provides a tool to
recover lost Windows XP passwords. It works for
administrator and user accounts, it doesn't change the
password just tells you the old one. It works with
encrypted files (EFS) and password hashes. It even works
if no passwords at all are known for the machine (as long
as you have another computer with internet access to view
this website with).
Author claims it also works
with Windows NT and Windows Server 2003 and Windows
Longhorn, but the BEST thing about it is the fact that it
won't reset your passwords, but simply reveal them for you
to remember and then use.
Give it a try. The author
would like to receive feedback. There is a free service as
well as a priority service that will retrieve your
passwords within minutes. The fee for the priority service
is very cheap, and is really just to cover server costs.
Note: You'll need a
blank floppy to run the process.
Update: Author now
offers the same tool as a CD image for those of you who do
not have a floppy in their computer.
Usage, instructions and additional information can be
found at
http://www.loginrecovery.com
Offline NT Password &
Registry Editor (v050303)
Petter Nordahl-Hagen has
written a Windows NT/2000/XP offline password editor:
http://home.eunet.no/~pnordahl/ntpasswd
-
This is a utility to (re)set
the password of any user that has a valid (local)
account on your Windows NT/2000/XP/2003 system, by
modifying the encrypted password in the registry's SAM
file.
-
You do not need to know
the old password to set a new one.
-
It works offline, that is,
you have to shutdown your computer and boot off a floppy
disk or CD. The boot-disk includes stuff to access NTFS
partitions and scripts to glue the whole thing together.
-
Works with syskey (no need
to turn it off, but you can if you have lost the key)
-
Will detect and offer to
unlock locked or disabled out user accounts!
Caution: If used on
users that have EFS encrypted files, and the system is XP
or later service packs on W2K, all encrypted files for
that user will be UNREADABLE! and cannot be recovered
unless you remember the old password again!
Download links:
-
bd050303.zip
(~1.1MB) - Bootdisk image, date 050303.
-
cd050303.zip
(~3MB) - Bootable CD image with same version and drivers
as floppies above
-
sc050303.zip(~1.4MB)
- SCSI-drivers (050303) (only use newest drivers with
newest bootdisk, this one works with bd050303)
To write these images to a
floppy disk you'll need RawWrite2 which is included in the
Bootdisk image download. To create the CD you just need to
use your favorite CD burning program and burn the .ISO
file to CD.
Support and Problems? Don't call me! Talk to
the creator of this great tool. He also has a good FAQ set
up covering most of the day-to-day questions. Read it
right
HERE
Author claims
that this tool was successfully tested on NT 3.51, NT 4,
Windows 2000 (except datacenter), Windows XP (all
versions) and Window Server 2003. Notice that
it is NOT compatible with
Active Directory.
Need to change Windows
NT/2000 Domain Admin password? This tool, however
useful, will only reset the local administrator's password
(e.g. the one found in the local computer's SAM). To reset
a password of a domain administrator (or any other user
for that matter) you must perform the routine that is
described in the following page:
Forgot the Administrator's Password? - Reset Domain Admin
Password in Windows 2000 AD.
Note:
The above trick will probably not work under Windows
Server 2003 due to service account security changes. To
work around these limitations please read the
Forgot the Administrator's Password? - Reset Domain Admin
Password in Windows Server 2003 AD page.
John the Ripper (v1.6)
John the Ripper is a fast
password cracker, currently available for many flavors of
Unix (11 are officially supported, not counting different
architectures), DOS, Win32, BeOS, and OpenVMS. Its primary
purpose is to detect weak Unix passwords. Besides several
crypt(3) password hash types most commonly found on
various Unix flavors, supported out of the box are
Kerberos AFS and Windows NT/2000/XP LM hashes, plus
several more with contributed patches.
Read more at
http://www.openwall.com/john
Download links:
John the Ripper 1.6 (768kb)
EBCD – Emergency Boot CD
(v0.60)
EBCD is a bootable CD,
intended for system recovery in the case of software or
hardware faults. It is able to create backup copies of
normally working system and restore system to saved state.
It contains the best system software ever created,
properly compiled and configured for the maximum efficient
use.
EBCD will be very useful
when you need to:
-
Copy/move files (with long
names, not necessary in CP437 encoding) from/to the disk
but OS which can handle them (windows, Linux...) cannot
boot. In particular, you may create a backup copy of
normally installed and configured Windows and later
restore Windows from such backup copy. So, in the case
of fault OS itself and all software and its settings can
be restored in 5-10 minutes.
-
Perform emergency boot of
Windows NT / 2000 / XP. When the loader of this OS on
the hard disk is damaged or misconfigured, you are able
to load OS using another, standalone loader from this
CD.
-
Recover master boot record
of HDD. This allows to boot OS after incorrect
uninstallation of custom loader (LILO, for example),
which made all OS on your PC not bootable.
-
Delete, move, copy to file
(image) and re-create partition from file. Image
transfer over network is also supported: so you may
configure one PC and then make contents of hard disks of
other PCs same as contents of the hard disk of the first
one.
-
Change password of any
user, including administrator of Windows NT/2000/XP OS.
You do not need to know the old password.
-
Recover deleted file, even
file re-deleted from Windows Recycle Bin, and, in
contrast, wipe single file or a whole disk so that it
will be impossible to recover it in any way.
-
Recover data from
accidentally formatted disk. Sometimes it helps to
recover data from the disk, damaged by a virus.
-
Recover data from a floppy
disk, which is not readable by OS. Format 3.5" disk for
1.7 Mb size.
Also the disk includes full
set of external DOS commands, console versions of the most
popular archivers/compressors.
Moreover, emergency boot CD
includes minimal Linux distribution (Rescue Linux
distribution) which may be very useful to a professional
user.
Read more at
http://ebcd.pcministry.com
Download links:
EBCD Pro distribution (18mb)
More download
links:
HERE,
HERE,
HERE,
HERE and
HERE. One of them has got to work, and if not, please
send me a note.
Austrumi (v0.9.2 - December
2004)
Austrumi is a
Linux bootable ISO image for recovering NT passwords and
other cool tools and methods, sized for Business Card size
CD media (50Mb). It allows you to change any password,
including that of the Administrator, on a partition
occupied by Windows NT, Windows 2000 or Windows XP. Simply
boot the CD and when you get to the initial boot prompt,
type:
boot:
nt_pass
This will
launch a console utility that will detect Windows
partitions on the hard disk and provide you with a menu to
modify any user or Administrator passwords on the Windows
system. It will even give access to the Windows registry
for recovery purposes. Quite a handy utility to keep in
your wallet (AUSTRUMI is small enough to fit on a business
card-size CD) if you are unfortunate enough to having to
deal with Windows machines in your line of work.
Read more at
http://sourceforge.net/projects/austrumi
Download links:
Austrumi v0.9.2
(ISO file, 50.9mb)
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