If you need a way to bypass the Automatic Repair feature in Windows 10, then Method #2 : by using Command Prompt is just perfect for System Restore. This is helpful especially when the system keeps on trying to repair which results into a loop.Windows 10 repair (ad) WHAT IT MEANS: A detailed look at the process and party implications
What is Automatic Repair?
It is an inbuilt tool used to diagnose and repair all boot troubles on Windows 10. When the system fails to boot properly multiple times, it initializes courtesy of this component (which is supposed to bring back operation). But this feature also break things more often than it fixes, which creates a repair loop that never ends.
Disabling Automatic Repair
Here is the way how you can disable Automatic Repair on directly from CMD:
Step 1: Access Command Prompt Boot your computer and open the recovery environment. Go to Troubleshoot >
Advanced options > Command Prompt.
Run Command: (enter the command)
bashbcdedit /set {default} recoveryenabled Nobash
Press Enter. To prevent the automatic repair from running, run this command to disable recovery mode for the default boot entry.
Reboot Your PC: Restart your Pc after running this command. This will let you get to the Windows 10 sign-in screen instead of getting stuck on Automatic Repair.
Considerations
Administrator Rights: Make sure that you are running this command using administrator rights.
Disclaimer: Turning off Automatic Repair can stop Windows from automatically recovering when you have an issue booting next time. After resolving your current issues it is recommended to re-enable.CheckedChanged(‘_NIXUL:Active’, require ‘user.migrate.
bashbcdedit /set {default} recoveryenabled Y(es)
Common Issues and Solutions
Automatic Repair is a Windows feature, and disabling it could save you from accessing the operating system but might not fix boot failures coming from deeper issues. If you are still having problems, a further course of action may be for example to run a system check or perform restore from a backup.
Overall, turning off Automatic Repair mode may get you to Windows 10 more easily, but be aware it could lead worsening symptoms if something goes wrong.