How To Install - Hasp Multikey Usb Dongle Emulator On Windows 7 64 Bit Exclusive
With the original HASP dongle plugged into your computer, it's time to extract its data. This process creates a .dump file, which is a snapshot of the information stored inside the dongle.
Look under the section in Device Manager.
The emulator relies on Windows Registry entries to mimic the unique data of your specific hardware key. Locate your software's corresponding .reg file.
Windows 7 64-bit strictly enforces a policy where all kernel-mode drivers must be digitally signed by a trusted authority. Because MultiKey emulators are custom homebrew drivers, Windows will block them by default (resulting in a "Digital Signature Error / Error Code 52"). Put Windows into Test Mode With the original HASP dongle plugged into your
You should see entries like or SafeNet Sentinel Hardware Key without any yellow exclamation triangles.
If Windows displays a red warning dialog stating "Windows can't verify the publisher of this driver software" , click . Step 5: Verify the Installation
This typically indicates a corrupted registry dump. Re-verify your .reg file data, ensure it matches your specific dongle's encryption keys, and re-merge it. The emulator relies on Windows Registry entries to
Wait for the popup message confirming successful installation. Step 3: Backup and Apply the Dongle Registry Dump
Before beginning the installation process, ensure you have the following components and system configurations ready:
The MultiKey emulator reads virtual dongle data directly from the Windows Registry. You must import the hardware key's data encryption keys. Locate your software's .reg dump file. With the original HASP dongle plugged into your
Now that we have a properly formatted registry file, we can proceed with the core installation of the MultiKey emulator.
Look for or SafeNet HASP Key . Ensure there is no yellow exclamation mark next to the entry.
Run RTDumperGUI.exe .
Replace XXXX with the VID and PID values you noted down in the previous step.