@Andalu. Thanks. Your tip helped me. I needed more than that KB2864202. I downloaded the UpdatePack7R2 from orum.oszone.net. and installed it. Next go to the device manager and install the uaspstor driver from "daniel_k". Everything works.
For me, external hard drives don't automatically install any driver. I have to manually specify this driver
Does that board even have Compatibility Support Module or anything of the sort in order to boot windows 7?
Good morning all. Until recently, I have been happily dual booting Win 10 and Win 7 on Asus X99-AII. Then, MB failed and I bought Asus Z690 Plus WiFi D4 with Intel i5 12600. I have been reading MDL and WinRaid for hours, seeking way to enable Win7 USB XHCI on this modern board, Tried solutions from @canonkong and @FERNANDO with no success. (I did get i225-V Ethernet working thanks to lummi on YouTube). Hardware ID: PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_7AE0&SUBSYS_86941043&REV_11 PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_7AE0&SUBSYS_86941043 PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_7AE0&CC_0C0330 PCI\VEN_8086&DEV_7AE0&CC_0C03 Of course, I would be grateful for your guidance on this question. With regards and thanks .. Edit: After re-reading instructions from @daniel_k on page one, USB in Win7 is working well. Thanks to all who helped ! Is it at all possible to get the PCI bus working now ?
I know this thread has been going for a long time and maybe no one is interested in bugs. I have W7 x64 running well on an Asus B360M mobo using older USB 3 drivers from @cannonkong. Just loaded W7 Pro x86 onto a spare drive to experiment and tried to follow the instructions on page 1. Got a BSOD with an F7 error code. I associated that on XP with a SATA driver problem. When I loaded the KB 2864202 ver 1.1 framework driver, I got an error. Seems I already had it loaded but cannot confirm version yet since my PS/2 mouse is not working and I am using just keyboard. I am still working on it and will report back. If anyone has any ideas, would appreciate input. Not sure if I need to enter my B360M USB hardware ID in the inf file. The drivers loaded OK without it. On reboot, it crashed.
Update...Got it going with only the USB drivers. Congrats @daniel_k and @canonkong as well as @Mov AX, 0xDEAD. Need to experiment with the UASP drivers. Surprisingly both my USB3 devices are working. I have the stock USB ports on the Asus B360M as well as an outboard card from VIA. So, @canonkong 's generic driver managed to pick up two devices with different hardware ID's that were listed in his INF file. Mind you, I had installed two separate versions of the usbxhci drivers, not expecting that to work for both USB devices, but it did. I installed the 2nd set by mistake while searching for my VIA drivers. Over here that's called serendipity. It's not clear to me what the UASP drivers are for. Could someone enlighten me? Is it about using an external SATA drive? BTW...I made some changes with the updates as well, maybe that made a difference. I used an older copy of the UpdatePack7R2-21.7.7.Analoty.exe and it loaded the W7 SP2 equivalent KB3125574 which was not loaded yet. Don't know if it replaced the KB2864202 update which was installed but may have been a lower version than 1.1.
Have folks run into the issue where it's only the usb keyboard that is *not* working? All my usb mice and even an array of different usb flash drives all are detected by the system, but none of my usb keyboards are. The backstory is that this system is an intel 11th gen (Asus B560 running in full uefi mode). I had a devil of a time getting Windows 7 installed and was only successful by using FlashBoot Pro, which has generic USB 3.X host controller drivers already slipstreamed. Once in Windows, I also tried updating the USB drives with the set offered here but made no difference. The motherboard does have a PS2 port I could use, heh, but it's interesting that it's only the keyboard not working. Any thoughts around this? Thanks for any help here.
@killa339 ...is it a Logitech keyboard and is it using a universal unifying receiver? I've had issues in the past with drivers. Check out the Logitech site for your particular model. In fact, look in Device Manager and make sure the device is working correctly.
Thanks for the reply. No, I'm using super basic Dell keyboards -- no media controls on them, etc. Was hoping as standard/basic as possible would make them more compatible with all this.
@killa339 ...What happens if you go into device manager, find the keyboard listing then uninstall it? Select 'delete drivers' if it is selectable. Reboot and see if Windows loads new drivers. It may give you the 'new hardware discovered' notification.
I had the same problem with a really old Dell keyboard that came from an old Inspiron system and in my case I was able to solve it by going into device manager right clicking the keyboard and choosing to update the driver. Then I browsed the computer for the driver and selected the C:\Windows\System32\drivers directory then it was able to recognize some basic drivers and function. Specifically kbdclass.sys and kbdhid.sys If the keyboard is listed as an unknown device, and there are several unknown devices you might be able to find out which one it is by going into details selecting hardware ids and throwing them into google until you get something keyboard related, that's what I did anyway xD