How
to back up your Windows registryShould I back up the entire registry,
or just one key? - We recommend that if you edit the registry,
you back up the entire registry. While this is the safest method, it can be more
complex than backing up a single key.
- Instead of backing up the entire registry,
you can back up a specific key before changing it--but this has some risk. You
must know exactly which key to back up. And, for Windows 2000/XP, you must be
sure that none of the keys contain encrypted values.
WARNING:
Do not double-click the backup file that was placed on the Windows desktop
except to undo the changes that you made to the registry.
Backing
up a single Windows 98/Me/XP registry key

Backing up a single Windows 98/Me/XP registry key
This section tells how to back up a single registry key. Backing up a Windows
98/Me/XP registry key is known as "exporting." WARNING:
Do not use this method to export the entire registry or an entire
registry "hive." (A "hive" is what the highest level of registry
"folder" is called.) The example below shows the entire registry;
note that My Computer is at the top. The example has all the hive names enclosed
by red boxes. If you want to back up any of the hives, close this part of the
page, and read the section "How to back up the entire registry."
Do not export from these levels: 
To back up a single Windows 98/Me/XP registry key
- Click Start > Run.
- In the Run dialog box, type:
regedit and then click OK.
- In the Registry Editor, in the left pane, select the registry key that you
were told to modify. (Registry keys use yellow folders for icons, as shown in
the picture below.)
You must back up the parent key (not the value
that is displayed in the right pane) for any value that you are modifying
or deleting. For example: You are removing a Trojan horse and must
delete a particular value from the registry key: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run
In this case, browse down to the \Run key and select it (see below): 
- Once you select the registry key in step 3, do one of the following:
- In Windows 98/Me, click Registry, and then click Export
Registry File.
- In Windows XP, click File, and then click Export.
- Do one of the following:
- In Windows 98, in the Save
in box, select Desktop.
- In Windows Me/ XP, click the Desktop
icon.
- In the File name box, enter a name that you will remember,
such as registry backup.
- Click Save. The file is saved to your Windows
desktop.
- Continue editing the registry as instructed.
- Keep the backup
file for a week or so, until you are sure that the changes that you made have
not caused any problems.
Backing
up a single Windows 2000 registry key

Backing up a single Windows 2000 registry key
As of this writing, Microsoft recommends that if you use Windows 2000, you use
the older version of the Registry Editor, Regedt32.exe, to back up a registry
key. Read the instructions in the section "How to Export Registry
Keys" in HOW
TO: Backup, Edit, and Restore the Registry in Windows 2000 (Q322755).
Backing
up the entire Windows 98/Me/2000/XP registry

Backing up the entire Windows 98/Me/2000/XP registry
If you backup the entire Windows registry, you can restore it if you want to reverse
your edits. This is the recommended and safest method. Here are links to Microsoft
documents that will help you do this: Windows 98/Me Follow
the instructions in the Microsoft article How
To Backup, Edit, and Restore the Registry in Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows
Me, Article I.D. 322754 Windows 2000 Follow the instructions
in the Microsoft article How
to back up, edit, and restore the registry in Windows 2000, Article I.D. 322755
Windows XP Follow the instructions in the Microsoft article How
to back up, edit, and restore the registry in Windows XP and Windows Server 2003,
Article I.D. 322756 Technical
Information: Restoring a backed up Windows
98/Me/XP registry key If, after you make changes to the registry,
you find that the changes were in error or that something no longer works correctly,
you can undo the changes that you made by merging the backup file into the registry.
WARNINGS:
This will undo all deletions or changes that you
made within the part of the registry that is within the backup file.
- It will not remove additions that you made--for example, if you created
a new key or value.
- If you installed new software or made other changes
to the computer since you created the backup file, it is possible that merging
the backup file into the registry could affect some of these changes.
To restore a backed up Windows 98/Me/XP registry key
- Locate the registry backup file that you created. It will have an icon similar
to this:

- Double-click the icon. A message similar to the following displays:

- Click Yes. A confirmation displays.

- Click OK.
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