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I am looking for some kind help regarding below query.

I am trying to write (using WriteFile()) to a windows disk partition within a Windows PE environment by opening a disk handle and seeking to the partition starting offset.

WriteFile() is returning error code 5 (ACCESS DENIED).
I believe it is because the application has not locked the volume before writing to the volume.
My application has only the partition number as input. The ioctl FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME needs a volume handle which is returned by CreateFile() and this needs a volume GUID as parameter.
So how do I get the volume GUID via the partition number?

Regards.

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  • Your question is highly convoluted, please read this and this
    – specializt
    Apr 14, 2015 at 13:14
  • FWIW, the FSTCL_LOCK_VOLUME control does in fact work on PhysicalDrive0 so it might also work on Harddisk0Partition1. That's probably the simplest solution for in-house work. Apr 15, 2015 at 0:17
  • Failing that, you might need to enumerate the volumes using FindFirstVolume/FindNextVolume and then I think you could use the SetupAPI or the PNP Configuration Manager API to determine the disk and partition numbers for each volume. I'm not sure. Apr 15, 2015 at 0:23
  • Actually re-reading your question it sounds as if you're using a handle to PhysicalDrive0 to do the actual work, so you should probably call FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME using that same handle. The only catch is that this will lock all the volumes on that drive rather than just the one you want - but conversely, you probably can't write via PhysicalDrive0 unless all the volumes are locked anyway. Apr 15, 2015 at 0:27
  • @Harry . Thanks a lot. I tried handle to PhysicalDrive0 and then FSCTL_LOCK_VOLUME. WriteFile() sometimes still returns access denied error. But with handle to Harddisk0Partition1 it always works. Would the pathname of type Harddisk0Partition1 work in all environments?
    – Raghu
    Apr 16, 2015 at 11:31

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