Once the data is captured, you can use additional tools like UniDumpToReg
If you are working with a legacy Toro driver that does not have a 64-bit signed counterpart, you may need to temporarily boot Windows into "Disable Driver Signature Enforcement" mode to test functionality. For long-term production environments, contact the original software vendor to exchange the old hardware key for a modern, native 64-bit USB licensing solution.
Modern 64-bit Windows requires digitally signed drivers. To run non-signed monitor components, you may need to enable Test Mode (using bcdedit /set testsigning on in an admin prompt) or disable driver signature enforcement via the boot menu. Logging and Dumping: Launch hlMon.exe with Administrator rights. toro aladdin dongles monitor 64 bit
If you need to configure this for a specific version of your software, please let me know:
Older Toro and Aladdin keys used 25-pin parallel (LPT) ports. Modern motherboards lack these ports, requiring PCI-e expansion cards or USB-to-Parallel adapters, which often fail to pass low-level dongle commands. Monitoring Dongle Activity Once the data is captured, you can use
Once the drivers are installed and the dongle is recognized by the OS, launch the Toro Aladdin Dongle Monitor
Extracts critical "PW1" and "PW2" passwords needed for data dumping. To run non-signed monitor components, you may need
Ensure the haspvlib.dll corresponding to your software's Vendor ID is placed in both the SysWOW64 and System32 directories. Error: "Toro Monitor Cannot Connect to Service"
The software constantly "pings" the dongle to verify that the license is present. If the dongle is unplugged, lost, or damaged, your critical software halts immediately. Why Do You Need the Toro Aladdin Dongles Monitor 64-Bit?