I'm running Windows 10 pro 22H2.
64-bit on an older (2016) Dell Latitude E6430 laptop with 16 gb ram. Disks are Samsung SSD formatted GPT and NTFS.
Trying to understand what
There has been a change to the Avast Boot Time scan, in that it runs under the Windows Runtime Environment (WinRE), so I don't know if that is your problem not knowing what the WinVer build is.
means.
I looked up Windows RE, and google calls it "Recovery Environment", kind of like PE (Preinstallation Environment), which I have a vague idea about from experience with BartPE a long long time ago.
I also googled and found "Windows Runtime Environment" which google links abbreviated as "RTE", though it wasn't really clear to me what that actually meant except something a bit earlier in the boot process of Windows 10.
Pardon my ignorance here, but isn't a rootkit something that runs before windows gets going and hides itself so windows can't detect it?
I assumed that the Avast "boot scan" ran on a really basic tiny OS (like a 3 command, really-limited DOS or something) so it could see the entire disk and check out what was going on in the REALLY early boot section.
Does this new "RE" version of the boot scan have that capability? Why the change? Wouldn't that be less capable?
Sorry if I'm asking too many questions, but I don't really understand what this RE is and what it's advantages and limitations are - and I'm trying really hard to not get any funky stuff into my bare metal backups since I have pretty limited storage space and I don't do daily backups to an external drive or anything.
Thanks again for your help with this. I about freaked when I saw the boot scan just not happen. LOL ---NOW
