What Is Ntswitch?: Home - News - Download - Purchasing - Support - Contact Us
What Is Ntswitch?: Home - News - Download - Purchasing - Support - Contact Us
What Is Ntswitch?: Home - News - Download - Purchasing - Support - Contact Us
What is NTSwitch?
NTSwitch is a small freeware program that allows you to turn an existing NT Workstation
or Windows 2000 Professional installation into an NT Server or a Windows 2000 Server
environment.
It's well-known that Workstation and Server environments are virtually identical. The
operating system decides which "flavor" to run in based on two registry values:
l HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\ProductOptions - ProductType
[REG_SZ]
l HKLM\SYSTEM\Setup - SystemPrefix [REG_BINARY 8 bytes]
Since the release of NT4, Microsoft has taken measures to keep the user from changing
these registry values. The operating system has two watcher threads that revert any
changes made to these two registry settings, as well as warn the user about
"tampering".
The good guys at SYSInternals have supposedly created an application called NTTune.
They did not release it to the public, but only to the press - their intent was to
demonstrate the fact that there's really no difference between Server and Workstation.
However, they did not make their utility publicly available. The application disabled the
system threads thus letting the user change the aforementioned registry values.
The public is curious - people came up with a way of changing these settings without
NTTune. Details are here. It involves hacking the NTOSKRNL.EXE executable so that the
watchdogs are looking at some other registry setting. While this works, it's definitely not
for the faint at heart.
Our utility, NTSwitch, is not as slick as NTTune - it does not disable the system threads.
It's not as horrible as the NTOSKRNL.EXE hack either.
l Backup the SYSTEM hive of the registry using the registry API.
l Edit the information contained in the backup file.
l Restore the registry from the backup.
l Reboot the computer so that the changes can take effect.
A quick-and-dirty hack. It works, and it's at least as safe as the two previous solutions.
We're giving it away for free. Go here to download it. The readme.txt contained in the
zip file might have some late-breaking information, be sure to read it.
Also, the usual "freeware as is" clause applies: It's free. You use it on your own risk. We
do not take responsibility for anything that might happen as a consequence of running
the software.