Peter Mount's Blog
Various ramblings on virtually everything
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts

Sunday, January 04, 2009

How to change the Blue Screen of Death into another colour

We have all had a BSOD (Blue Screen Of Death) when something catastrophic has happened with Windows - which is usually when you try to do anything useful, but if you get tired of it being the standard Blue or if you have a visual imparement so the default settings are useless for you, here’s how to change it. First open the SYSTEM.INI file found in the %systemroot% folder (usually C:\Windows) and locate the [386enh] section. Add the following two entries if they are not present: MessageBackColor= MessageTextColor= Each of those entries take a single hexadecimal digit defining the colour:
  • 0 - Black
  • 1 - Blue
  • 2 - Green
  • 3 - Cyan
  • 4 - Red
  • 5 - Magenta
  • 6 - Yellow
  • 7 - White
  • 8 - Grey
  • 9 - Bright blue
  • A - Bright green
  • B - Bright cyan
  • C - Bright red
  • D - Bright magenta
  • E - Bright yellow
  • F - Bright white
So to change it to Cyan and bright white text, then use the following: MessageBackColor=3 MessageTextColor=F The settings will take effect the next time you restart Windows. NB: The values must be in upper case hence using F and not f in the above example.

Monday, December 29, 2008

Finding the process id of the process owning a port

Occasionally there’s time where you need to find out what process owns a port currently open. On the Mac this can be done easily by using the following line - here we are looking for port 8080: ps u --no-heading -p `netstat -nlept | awk '/[:]8080 / {split ($9,t,"/"); print t[1]}'` 2>/dev/null For windows you don’t have a decent shell (and cygwin would probably not work here), so you can use the following batch script to do the same: @echo off for /F “usebackq tokens=5″ %%f in (`netstat -b -n ^| find “:%1″`) do call :process %%f goto :eof :process tasklist /FI “PID eq %1″ /NH If the above code was called findport.bat then running findport 8080 would then find the process owning port 8080.