back to article Windows 7 customers hit by service pack 1 install 'fatal error' flaws

A brace of "fatal errors" is hampering Windows 7-based computers that have been updated with Microsoft's first service pack for its current operating system. In fact, since Windows 7 SP1 was released late last month, many users have been grumbling on forums about problems with the install of the update package. Similarly, The …

COMMENTS

This topic is closed for new posts.
  1. bill 36
    Happy

    Reinstall?

    Best way to avoid it is to install Ubuntu!

    1. sgb
      Linux

      As an ubuntu user since version 5.10....

      ...and various BSDs before that, I'd like to point out that all operating systems have bugs, even Linux. In the case of Linux, if it doesn't work it's not necessarily the fault of the developer. It can be the hardware manufacturer or the user that is to blame, but this hardly makes Ubuntu the answer to all software problems. If a user is left powerless by a service pack update, Ubuntu is just going to give them harder problems to solve.

      I'm a big fan of choice and having the right tool for the job. Sometimes, and for some people, Windows is the right tool.

      Simon

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        re: all operating systems have bugs

        but at least if you're running a *nix system you can usually boot another instance and hack the config to sort it out.

        1. Adam Price
          Boffin

          Read the KB Article linked

          That is exactly what the KB article tells you to do, you boot from the install media and modify the registry.

          OK The registry is ugly in principle, but in practice for this particular error it's not any harder than with a *nix box.

          1. Tom 35

            "boot from the install media"

            What about all the lucky people with an HP or equilvent with only burn them your selft restore DVDs. Same problem they had since XP asked them to instert their CD.

            1. Michael C
              Happy

              not an issue

              With Win 7, even without access to the original media, you can burn a recovery DVD from the backup control panel that allows you to boot and diagnose just the same as having the real OS DVD.

              Also, failure to have enabled backups, snapshots, etc to be able to recover from a service pack failure is no excuse. Anyone "rebuilding" due to a package failure is simply doing it wrong, unless the disk itself got currupt of failed in the process (unlikely coincidence not typically related to the patching process itself, but a bad disk to start with).

          2. Goat Jam
            Paris Hilton

            (OEM) install media?

            Whats that then?

            <reaches for Lenovo "Recovery Disk">

            1. Danny 14

              but

              I thought *all* restore media was essentially the same image type restore? Cant BARTPE equivalent hack an installer by unpacking?

          3. Anonymous Coward
            FAIL

            The Registry..

            was a pigs ear of a design decision. A total fail made back in the early 90's that we're still having to suffer to this day.

        2. ZweiBlumen
          FAIL

          re: running a *nix system

          "but at least if you're running a *nix system you can usually boot another instance and hack the config to sort it out."

          This is exactly why so few home users have Linux installed. "Hack the config"??? What ordinary user knows what on earth that means? MS screwed up on this one, but don't tell me that hacking the config is an option for 99.99% of users....

        3. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          re: hack the config to sort it out

          Thumbs-down presumably posted by people who are crap *nix admins, or who are masters of hacking the Windows Registry offline.

      2. This post has been deleted by its author

        1. Steen Hive
          Flame

          @Def

          "If any piece of software has a bug it's the fault of the developers. The end. You can't push the blame on to hardware manufacturers because it wasn't tested sufficiently, or on users because they're allowed to do things they shouldn't"

          Utter bollocks. Any compatibility and stability problems endemic to Linux are overwhelmingly caused by manufacturers not releasing proper (or any!) specs for the hardware, and kernel devs having to take a reverse-engineered "best guess".

          Most device drivers for windows are written in-house by the manufacturers themselves and simply cross-signed with a Microsoft certificate. Free software seldom has that luxury.

        2. Giles Jones Gold badge

          Might not directly be their fault

          What if the cause turned out to be a popular anti-virus software? How would that be Microsoft's fault?

          It's not beyond the realms of possibilities that a 3rd party product could get in the way. That would suggest a lack of real world testing.

          It might be interesting to hear of the numbers, a vocal thousand users is nothing out of a user base of millions.

        3. Jean-Luc
          Thumb Down

          Think before generalizing.

          I had a cheap consumer ASUS (?) multimedia mobo where Ubuntu would just hang at boot. Turns out the problem was caused by a crappy BIOS, probably involving power management/hibernate. Upon flashing the BIOS, the same exact Ubuntu worked just fine.

          If a faulty BIOS is not the fault of the hardware / BIOS vendor, whose fault is it, exactly?

          p.s. I've been using Linux on and off for about 10 years. Currently using OSX instead, because I really don't care much for having to do admin work on my primary machine. I just want it to work and am willing to lose some freedom in doing so. So it's not like I am a rabid Linux fan.

          1. Pigeon

            @Jean-Luc

            Yes, the hardware is a nightmare. I just gave away a new Toshiba which had awful problems. It seemed that there were differences from previous units with the same model number. Really, I couldn't be bothered, and bought a reconditioned Dell, which works ok... except for a microcode update on the wireless (maybe that's why it got sold).

            It's a jungle out there.

      3. Anonymous Coward
        Linux

        Linux user since Red Hat 4.0

        I agree that it's a horses for courses market out there, and for some people, Windows is the Right OS.

        Sadly though, Windows being the proprietary soup that it is, it makes it damn near impossible for the end user to debug.

        I don't envy Microsoft's position here. They've got literally thousands of reports, all with various device drivers and user applications, many of which were developed in secret, most of which were developed in isolation. All of which can be interacting in strange and unwanted ways.

        Yes, the hardware abstraction layer is designed to address some of these needs, but it still makes it one big mess for them to maintain. It's like the numerous medical specialists prescribing various drugs to a patient, leaving them with a cocktail of pills no one is sure about. I'm not surprised that things break.

        I guess Microsoft have more power to coerce co-operation with the companies involved, but I dare say it does sap a lot of time and resources simply because the industry are used to behaving like proverbial cats.

        The open-source solution to the problem isn't perfect either, and some companies run a mile from it, but I think the more open and collaborative approach is helping in this regard. I haven't had a breakage on a Linux machine that has seen me having to completely reload in a very long time.

        Windows on the other hand, I've had installations spontaneously develop faults that have taken days to rectify.

        Linux costs me my time to maintain it. Windows seems to cost both my time, and significant money, thus for me it's an easy choice.

        I think that Microsoft could do well to look at how things like device drivers and such are managed in BSD and Linux… which in doing so, could make their lives easier, and improve the user experience for everyone. That doesn't mean open-sourcing the Windows OS (although that could have some good benefits), just co-operating more closely with the manufacturers and software companies to better co-ordinate efforts.

      4. yossarianuk
        Linux

        No windows live cd to repair is there ?

        Re : sgb

        Yes all os's have issues sometimes with updates, I have also seen Ubuntu installs no longer able to go into X or even get to grub after an Ubuntu (although the same applies to all distros) update.

        The big difference is ..

        Linux is always so much easier to fix the issue and get back to your data when you have an unbootable OS - mainly thanks to live cd's - normally you get fix the issue yourself rather than be at the mercy of some joke company to wait for a fix.

        1. Michael C

          might not be true anymore

          Windows 7 recovery process actually works now. I've had great success with the Windows media in recovery mode, or the restore disk made via the backup app being able to automatically repair windows installations. Its fixed things that under Vista or XP would have required multiple 3rd party tools or a complete restore. Not perfect (and still required FAR more often than reasonable), but it actually works. Comparing that process to Linux recovery, and the knowledge required, toss up on complexity and effort... Apple still has the best recovery process...

      5. N2

        Right tool for the right job

        Couldnt agree more.

        Although sometimes one has to question if the 'tools' at Microsoft actually test their code before shoving it out the door

      6. doperative
        Linux

        It's all Linux's fault says Simon ..

        > If a user is left powerless by a service pack update, Ubuntu is just going to give them harder problems to solve, sgb

        In a working environment, you don't ever-ever install someone elses software patch. If you do patch, it's because something isn't working, and then you only patch that bit and nothing else. If it ain't broke, don't fix it. And calling something a service pack still don't make it a bug fix.

        > I'm a big fan of choice and having the right tool for the job. Sometimes, and for some people, Windows is the right tool.

        Insert marketing slogan for the Microsoft organization. Personally I am always pleasently suprised when my Windows box sucessfully boots up each morning.

    2. bazza Silver badge

      @bill 36

      I've had perfectly ordinary Ubuntu installations self destruct after installing perfectly ordinary automatic updates. Took some serious hacking to sort out, and was way beyond what an ordinary user could be expected to do. Not very impressed.

      MS have had, in my personal experience, fewer update problems.

      Considering how important the ability to automatically update is to the adoption rates of an operating system, it's amazing how badly they go. An OS with a reliable update mechanism will gain a reputation for continued improvement, and things can only get better. An OS with a reputation for not getting successfully updated will be deeply unpopular because users know they'll get left high and dry. This never used to be a problem in consumer land - bugs meant crashes that customers just fixed by turning off/on. But as functionality increases the power cycle fix becomes less acceptable.

      MS will get this one right sooner or later; they have generally done so in the past for mainstream windows. MS also have to get WP7 updates right too. Apple are just b*****ds because they use updates as a mechanism to piss off customers with older kit by leaving bits out for no sound technical reason, and even then they don't always get them right. Android is an update joke.

      1. ElReg!comments!Pierre
        WTF?

        at Bazza

        >MS have had, in my personal experience, fewer update problems.

        >MS will get this one right sooner or later; they have generally done so in the past for mainstream windows.

        Surely that is a joke

        1. Handle this!

          i agree

          the choices should not be sooner or later but later and much later with a maybe thrown in for good measure

      2. doperative

        Ubuntu automatic updates broke my computer

        > I've had perfectly ordinary Ubuntu installations self destruct after installing perfectly ordinary automatic updates. Took some serious hacking to sort out, and was way beyond what an ordinary user could be expected to do. Not very impressed.

        What were you doing running 'automatic updates', why didn't you restore from the nightly backups. You do keep nightly backups don't you?

        > Considering how important the ability to automatically update is to the adoption rates of an operating system, it's amazing how badly they go. An OS with a reliable update mechanism will gain a reputation for continued improvement, and things can only get better.

        See my other post, you don't ever-ever automatically update a working system. If it ain't broke don't fix it.

      3. Captain Scarlet Silver badge
        Paris Hilton

        @bazza

        So where is the new IE for Windows XP???

  2. Steve Evans
    Joke

    Ooooh...

    Looks like Windows 7 and WinMob 7 really are closely related!

  3. paulf
    Gates Horns

    Problem with W7 SP1 Hibernate

    <raises hand> I've had problems too although thankfully not as bad as those cited in the article.

    I'm running Win 7 Ultimate (non-OEM). I waited a couple of weeks after release before I installed SP1 just to see if the zero day adopters hit any major problems. Having not seen any big problems reported (not an exhaustive search for problems I admit!) I went ahead and installed only to find that Hibernate no longer worked on my desktop machine. If Hibernate was selected the machine shut off almost immediately, rather than taking 30-60 seconds to save the current state to disk first.

    Luckily I was able to wind back to the restore point created when SP1 was installed, and the problem was solved. The commentard cited in the article is right - SP1 does seem to remove all earlier restore points when it installs. Well, at least my experience concurs with theirs.

    Big fail (Again) M$FT.

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Happy

    Surprisingly enough...

    I installed it on my machine over the weekend with no problems at all. I almost feel left out (but very glad I have been).

  5. David 155

    Surely...

    Surely Wsus-ers could just NOT approve the update? Who in their right mind lets all updates auto approve? Especially a service pack!

    1. Idy
      Stop

      Having some links to some of the fixes might be useful!

      >Surely Wsus-ers could just NOT approve the update? Who in their right mind lets all updates >auto approve? Especially a service pack!

      Unfortunately something seems to have overridden the controls that allow you to only automatically approve certain updates. Possibly an SBS2008 issue...

      ----

      This fixed the issue for us:

      Boot to repair your computer, cancel repair, select Advanced Options and run a command prompt:

      just do notepad exe, open reboot.xml

      <?xml version='1.0' encoding='utf-8'?>

      <PendingTransaction Version="3.1">

      <POQ>

      <DeleteKeyValue path="\Registry\Machine\COMPONENTS" name="PendingRequired"/>

      </POQ>

      </PendingTransaction>

      copy that out and drop it into your pending.xml at the top

      reboot and voila!

  6. Anonymous Coward
    Thumb Down

    Since when is "many" a number?

    I mean, going by the Pratchett rule what you're telling me is that at least 4 people have had this problem.

    How about some numbers on how many people/organisations using WSUS did testing before pushing out the fix, and can prove that the test machines were fine with the update while the production machines weren't? Are there "many" of those as well?

    1. Anonymous Coward
      WTF?

      Wait, what?

      >"I mean, going by the Pratchett rule what you're telling me is that at least 4 people have had this problem."

      Huh? Are you implying that there's another number in between "two" and "many"? What is this, bizarro world? My head a'splode!

      1. Ammaross Danan
        Coat

        Yes

        Not to rail on someone's (hopefully) sarcasm, but:

        two - "a couple of"

        three(ish) - "a few"

        more than three(ish), but less than other "more shocking!" words - "some"

        The order of "many," "most," "a lot," "serious number of," etc are up to personal taste.

      2. Charles 9

        The Pratchett Rule...

        ...comes from a joke in the Discworld novel "Men At Arms" about dumb trolls being unable to count because they would go, "one, two, three, many". The joke is that no one ever considered that "many" can simply mean something else in a base-four counting system, with each "many" adding four to the number (and with "lots" to indicate a many of many--16, by our standards).

        1. Graham Dawson Silver badge

          Actually...

          It was one two many lots. They couldn't get to three. See Soul Music for further proof.

        2. Anonymous Coward
          Anonymous Coward

          It's an old joke (c. 400BC)

          The way begets one; one begets two; two begets three; three begets the ... myriad creatures.

    2. (AMPC) Anonymous and mostly paranoid coward
      Alert

      Yeah AC but.....don't you remember WNT SP6a?

      I was an early adopter of SP1 (a couple of days after its release) and I enjoyed the following seamless experience:

      1) My work Laptop. SP1 successfully installed via Windows Update after two tries,

      2) My fathers Desktop. SP installation failed repeatedly but the system rolled back every time. Mind you, I didn't hit the power button like some end-users might do.

      In the end, and after many failed attempts to defeat the evil SP, I took out the Windows 7 upgrade CD (which was fortunately available) and performed an in-situ upgrade of the OS, fully expecting the worst to happen. To my utter amazement, Windows 7 happily upgraded itself (although all subsequent WSUS updates obviously had to be re-applied) and then very happily swallowed SP1 after A SINGLE try. That method was recommended on an MS Blog in response to many desperate inquiries by people like meself.

      I am not saying this was fun. And I'm dead certain I'm not the only one who was bitten in the ass by SP1. I am just happy I discovered the good news before approving SP1 distribution on our corporate network's WSUS server (but no one should do that with a major service pack anyway, and yes you don't have to approve every update with WSUS, but you do have to learn how to drive WSUS). So I wouldn't rush to roll out SP1a , I'd wait until MS fixes itsgremlins. Alternatively you can test it in a quiet corner on an unimportant machine if you have an afternoon to spare . And dats da truth, o skeptical ones. The sky does sometimes fall.

  7. AndrueC Silver badge

    I installed SP1 last week

    I think I did anyway. Took about five minutes, a reboot and then it was done. That was using their public update site though.

  8. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Give 'em a break

    They've just donated $100,000 to Japan, they don't have any money left for fixing bug laden updates.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Joke

      ReTweet This!

      For every RT M$ will donate 1$ to fixing the SP1 problem.

  9. jonathanb Silver badge

    I had that problem

    It seems to be related to language packs. I uninstalled all the language packs, installed SP1, then reinstalled them.

    1. Kevin Turnquist
      Paris Hilton

      It is the language packs

      Ran into this problem with a Win 7 Ultimate install - actually restored from image - tried again. Boom. Did a swarch, and some obscure site mentioned that the errors seemed to be something about memory being exhausted.

      Apparently - if I follow this correctly - MS decided that instead of patching the language packs, it would have the SP remove them. For some reason (trying to do them all at once?) the system runs out of memory, and there goes your OS.

      Removing all language packs (other than your region default) fixed the issue on my system - though reapplying the language packs I needed was a bit time consuming.

      How this bug escaped the lab is baffling - do none of the test systems have language pack installs?

      Paris - because she can't figure out how this got out of test phase either...

  10. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    one machines good, one bad

    my home experience has been mixed.

    one machine updated perfectly, no glitches and is fine

    the other... refused to complete the update but backed it out and told me there was a problem (but not how to fix it)

  11. Big Bear
    Linux

    @Bill 36

    I concur - my industry wide personal experience with one particular machine is that I installed 9.04 and after a year or so of updates and the occasional reboot, it no longer bothers me with update notifications! This leads me to believe that I now have the ultimate, final, fully maxed version of Ubuntu which never needs any more development so surely must be classed as The Greatest OS EVER.

    Joking aside, I really should upgrade but I need to build up the enthusiasm to find all the drivers and support for the various bits of bobs inside the machine and then fiddle so that it works. Maybe once this darn project delivers I can set a weekend aside...

  12. Badvok
    Unhappy

    One machine fine, one machine bad - c0000034

    I've also had a mixed experience over the weekend. I likewise thought it was about time I applied the pack given that I'd heard nothing bad since the release. Nothing to do with WSUS, just manually updating machines at home.

    Had to try the hack that was posted on the technet forums to get the machine starting again - fortunately it didn't need a complete re-build - it eventually backed-out the SP1 update.

  13. The Dodoman
    FAIL

    No Clue Huh?

    Looks like the MS software dev outsourcing buddies are not answering their phones...

  14. zourtney

    Link

    I was greeted with this issue on Friday morning. It took the IT guy several hours (several computers, and several OSes) to fix it using the steps described at:

    http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en/w7itproinstall/thread/1c9a7151-b48c-4a98-aae7-a4b82682ea8e#bcabda57-7338-499f-aee2-d708e76df315

    Apparently, if you have the admin account turned on, you can get to the recovery console from the diagnostic GUI. I was not so lucky..!

  15. A B 3
    FAIL

    Needlessly complex

    Can anyone explain how you could do 90% of the stuff you do nowadays on an operating system that took up 5MB (a bit more if you include browser, media player and expansion card drivers)?

    I tried Kubuntu -really nice-, but to change some basic options you need to type in 10 lines of text.

    Another alternative is AROS (a free modern x86 Amiga OS) still needs work though.

    If MS want to sell me another copy of Windows they should go back to square one and write a lean streamlined OS for 'home' users. What they do for other users doesn't concern me

    1. Ammaross Danan
      Coat

      Re @ "Needlessly complex"

      "Can anyone explain how you could do 90% of the stuff you do nowadays on an operating system that took up 5MB (a bit more if you include browser, media player and expansion card drivers)?"

      The answer to your slightly confusing sentence (I can only presume you typed something wrong) is that you CAN'T do 90% of the stuff you do nowadays on a 5MB (think MS-DOS) operating system. No GUI, no internet (just drivers alone for the tons of modems out there would be more than 5MB, not to mention NICs if you use a separate DSL/Cable modem instead of a simple dialup). Of course, a browser that is NOT lynx or the like would run at least 5MB too.

      A fuzzy, feel-good interface (even OSX) takes up a lot of disk space. Functionality takes up space as well. The OS is likely "bloated" in your opinion because you don't even use half of the functionality that is available through menus, let alone any of the more hard-core functionality (when did you last use Group Policies? [just to name one]). A Linux install takes over 1GB (usually around 4GB for more common rollouts). I definitely wouldn't label Linux as a "for everyone" OS just yet. I feel 100% comfortable, however, having Win7 stuffed on machines though. No need to walk the parents through command lines or VI editing format-reliant config files.

      1. ElReg!comments!Pierre
        WTF?

        1GB? Really?

        damnsmalllinux.org

        50MB; streamlined, but not absolutely minimal.

        My usual full-fledged Debian image is ~500MB; and that's with some pretty bloated productivity applications. I don't know where you're pulling that 1-4GB figure from (although I may hazard a wild guess...).

      2. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        5MB (think MS-DOS) --- ?

        MS-DOS fitted on a floppy. An old floppy, at that,

        1. Chika

          MSDOS on a floppy

          Sort of. The final installations sometimes spilled over, though it should be remembered that Windows 3.1 usually took 6 floppies and possibly another four for the Workgroups version. I suppose it really depends on what you are going to do with the OS, whether you actually need a GUI and, if you do, what bits are of any use. You have to remember that Windows, Linux, Amiga OS, heck even RISC OS which is my own stamping ground, are built for general purpose use and will have a lot in them that you may or may not use.

          The difference, I find, tends to be in the fripperies that go with the GUI to tart it up to appeal to those folk that care about such things and all the hand-holding wizards and such, some of which aren't much use. For example, how many users out there mod their Windows 7 installations to switch off the nags and the fancy screen bits to grab extra speed and reduce resource hunger? I still tend to use KDE3 on Linux because, up to now, KDE4 has been too hungry when doing video playback amongst other things.

          Yet I still like to do my DTP work on RISC OS. And that's a tiny system compared with the modern stuff, GUI included. It's all horses for courses really.

    2. redxine

      Maybe not in 5 mb....

      ... but I know that tinycore linux can get you a working desktop with firefox in under 10.

      http://www.tinycorelinux.com/

      Linux has the advantage of being monolithic, and is therefore pretty fast.

      I don't think that resorting to something like Amiga would be the long term answer.

    3. The Fuzzy Wotnot
      Stop

      Really or is that just utter cod's from a *nix hater?

      "I tried Kubuntu -really nice-, but to change some basic options you need to type in 10 lines of text."

      Really? You must have screwed up the install pretty badly for that to be your last resort! I admin Solaris boxes day in day out from two Ubuntu desktops, the last time I typed in some command line stuff on my desktops was about 6 months ago to get some WAV files converted to MP3 so I could listen to some music on Saturday morning callout.

      Can we drop this crap that Unix always needs command hacks, it's getting very tiresome and in 95% of the cases it's utter shite spouted by people who have never actually run a distro in their lives and simply want to put it down. If you don't like *nix, fine I have no problem with that, just stop ragging on it!

      I think WIndows is a great O/S it has opened up tech for so many who would never have considered a computer before, and this from someone who uses Mac with OSX at home and Solaris/Linux at work, I hardly touch Windows these days and still think it's a fine O/S.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        @fuzzy whatnot

        Part of the problem is that you may well be able to do everything in Unix or Linux from the GUI, but there are a lot of Unix/Linux 'gurus' who suggest that the only real way of doing something is through the command line. These are often the same people who call GUIs "point and drool" and slag Windows off, incorrectly, for having to do everything through the GUI.

        Personally I use Win/Linux and OSx, I always have the command line open, but I am under no illusions that I'm not normal in this respect. There are a lot of others who still think that computing should somehow be difficult, if it's being done properly, a bit sad really.

        1. frymaster

          true but not the whole story

          that is indeed part of why people use command-line, (a similar phenomenon on windows is "registry hacks" instead of just checking the checkbox in options), but part of it is when you are wanting to walk someone through something, it's easier to tell them to copy&paste from the command line than it is to say "bring up this menu, then that menu..." ad infinitum. Windows server MSDN articles do the same thing; to enable a lot of functionality they'll tell you to type something into an elevated command prompt rather than click on the "install server role" option or similar

  16. Tony Green

    Could cause some entertainment...

    ...once Nokia start installing it on their 'phones.

    1. Giles Jones Gold badge

      Erm...

      Windows 7 is not Windows Phone 7, or am I missing something? don't tell me Nokia are doing some sort of phone/tablet based on Windows 7?

  17. Modjo30

    All fine here

    I installed it on my machine as soon as it was available and have had no problem what so ever, i will say though that my 3d mark test results were lower after the install so it has done something to slow my pc down somewhere but nothing i can really notice

  18. Arctic fox
    Happy

    SPs always make me nervous.

    I run Win 7 hp 64-bit at home on two machines. A few days before the update was released I ran full system backup manually on both of them and then took backup off schedule. Happily when Redmond sent SP1 down the pipe to yours truly it installed in both cases without giving any noticeable problems. Had I experienced problems I could not find a work-around to I would have switched off Windows update, formatted the drives, restored from the drive image and then kept that monkey (AKA Windows updat) off-line until it was clear that a safe version was available. I've been burned before!

    1. Robert Carnegie Silver badge

      Absolutely.

      When they tell you to back up your system volumes (system and boot at least) before installing an update, they aren't joking. Having said that, my HP OEM tablet-laptop took it fine, too.

      I think you can tell Windows Update to stop Windows 7 Service Pack 1 and still give you other Windows 7 updates, and that way you probably have everything safely updated anyway, but don't take my word for that.

  19. Anonymous Coward
    Unhappy

    Sahib

    Clearly Microsoft aren't ready for the desktop yet.

  20. Kikki D

    64 bit

    I've installed SP1 on 4 Windows 7 Professional 64 bit machines and haven't had any issues. Haven't tried any 32 bit machines yet though......

  21. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    It was ever thus.

    Windows XP SP2 did the same thing to tens of thousands of machines. So did SP1.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      No surprise

      They're not referred as 'Nervous Packs' for nothing you know!

  22. Philippe
    FAIL

    Mixed bag of experience here..

    My install of SP1 on my daughter Win7 pro running PC was a mixed bag.

    On one hand, the Safari browser has slowed to a crawl and I had to install 5.0.1 to restore a bit of speed. On the other hand the "shut down" function which had ceased to work for some reasons weeks ago forcing me to use hibernate is now working again.

    1. Darryl
      Joke

      Well, THERE's yer problem

      Safari - Apple product. It's either a conspiracy on Apple's part to make Windows look bad, or a conspiracy on MS's part to make Safari look bad.

  23. Inachu

    Hmmmm

    Of those rebooting and crashing I wonder how many are infected with a virus or with a bad hard drive or a hard drive that could have used a chkdsk before sp1 was installed.

    I always run a chkdsk before applying a service pack.

    1. Danny 14
      Thumb Up

      aye

      and imaging the drive isnt such a bad thing either.

  24. Rob 101

    64bit seems to be the key

    Looking around for the solution for my failure (1 of 2 machines at home worked) it does seem that it is x64 that is having all of the trouble.

    Home edition went fine for me though but Professional failed (both x64).

    After running through many of the suggested hoops ending in wiping my entire update history it eventually found an issue with some of the system files for which a system recovery would be needed. The machine has some deeper issues though, possibly due to a power outage mid update some time ago, so is due for a re-build anyway.

    After various successes elsewhere I had just allowed SP1 through the WSUS. Worked on all but one of the machines and the failure on the 3rd isn't this one luckily enough.

    1. StooMonster
      Unhappy

      Oh the PITA

      64-bit Windows 7 Ultimate on development desktop with 64-bit Office (big Excel modelling) worked a treat, but 64-bit Enterprise version with 32-bit Office is giving me grief ... in permanent update cycle "Restart computer to finish update, installing, restart computer to finish update, etc." VM setups also giving me permanent loop of non working updates.

  25. volsano

    It happened to me

    I let SP.1 install.

    Machine was fine for a week.

    Then broke badly, and there were no restore points.

    Had to do two factory resets over the weekend.....the first left it unable to download files above 26meg without hanging.

    As I was not aware that SP.1 may be the culprit, I let the machine update itself to SP.1 again.

    It's like typing on a ticking time bo.......

  26. JaitcH
    WTF?

    XP Rules! Another reason for not changing

    Usually I don't even changing OS until well after the first SP.

    And no one in their right mind ever adopts a SP until a few weeks after release.

  27. Burch
    Gates Horns

    uhu

    Happened on one of my machines, crashed while installing with no way to roll it back. Somehow worked fine after a reinstall.

  28. The Original Steve

    Strange

    Tested out on 2 Win7 boxes here via WSUS without a problem. OEM licenced although only a fool puts the OEM image on the PC. Whip out the Volume Licence key's and deploy a propper image!!

  29. Dana W
    Jobs Halo

    It makes me smile.

    Why does reading this give me an urge to cackle maniacally in glee?

    1. Dante

      not sure?

      Maybe because you've forgotten that Apple always have problems with updates too?

      1. Dana W
        Thumb Down

        No actually

        The only update on OSX I ever saw fail was leopard with people running APE.

        I do support for most of the Mac people I know and I never see update problems. None at all.

  30. Efros

    7 machines no probs

    I think it's pretty much luck of the draw.

    To answer all of the "______ is better, never screwed up on update" (insert name of OS), I have witnessed and indeed screwed up myself OSX, Ubuntu, XP installations by following the prescribed update path. All OSs have their issues. The worst was an Apple that had to be sent back, update made the HDD disappear.

  31. Doug Glass
    Go

    Six Machines

    Five SP1 updates from the downloaded x86 installer and one new install using an RT7 Lite integrated SP1 x86 FullFile.

    <yawn> Boooorrrring.

  32. Michael 77
    FAIL

    Well, thanks but no thanks

    I installed this on a home m/c - running WIndows7 Home Premium, I think they call it.

    Bricked it.

    Complete re-build.

    Happy Customer?

    What do you think?!

  33. Shane McCarrick

    Warning- additional language packs

    I suffered from a different error to the ones (above), namely a dreaded 'out of memory' error. Apparently (after some research) its well known to Microsoft- and the 'work-around' is to uninstall any additional language packs you may have installed. Not only is this troublesome- but the cryptic manner in which you have to find a solution, is annoying as hell......

    I also had the hanging on update 124,556 of 300,000 (odd) updates on startup, and a myriad of other issues- that necessitated a fresh install......

    Microsoft should be ashamed to have let this out the door- if we did similar with our software, we'd have our business users baying for our blood.......

  34. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    home users are getting these errors too

    I work in the UK business support dept for a PC hardware manufacturer that starts with D and rhymes with Hell.Since SP1 came out even home/small business users users have had the same errors described. I think its been rushed out of the door too fast without the necessay testing reqd.

  35. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    Not just Win7

    I had this problem today with Win2k8R2 - same 0xc0000034 error message on boot, no suitable restore points, so I spent the morning reinstalling a domain controllers. Thanks, Microsoft.

  36. Adrian Esdaile
    Unhappy

    3 machines out of 7 here

    Maybe this is a clue:

    of our 7 machines, 2 run 32bit win 7 pro - they upgraded OK

    of the remaining 5 running 64bit win 7 pro, 2 upgraded OK

    the ones the failed all had extra language packs loaded - that is the ONLY difference in software packages.

    The language packs loaded were Chinese Simplified, Chinese Traditional and Japanese, all to support overseas projects. Our standard installs have only Australian English.

    I have read on a few other sites that it looks like the additional language packs might be the culprit.

    We fixed our machines using a WinPE boot CD and removing the 0000000000000000.cdf-ms statements from %systemroot%/WinSXS/pending.xml. Apparently MS tells us this will cause extra problems, but I only found that bit after I had 'fixed' our machines.

    Thanks MS. All the goodwill I had towards Windows 7 and SBS2008 evaporated in one quick update.

    I hate MS again now. Hating MS is cool.

  37. mmm mmm

    SP1

    It took me a few goes and while the download looked stalled, it did eventually go on.

  38. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    About a 15% failure rate here

    We're 100% 64-bit Win7 here. Tested the SP1 on a bunch of machines for last couple of weeks with no issues. Started rolling it out slowly across the company and started seeing the C00000034 fatal errors on a few machines. Thus far it's running about 15%-20% failure rate with *nothing* in common we can find yet. Machines created from the same default image running the same patch levels and same software will glitch and some won't. Total crapshoot with every install.

    For those of you hit by this, the MS TechNet article on booting into startup repair, getting to a command prompt, and manually editing the %windir%\winsxs\pending.xml file *DOES WORK* every time. It gets the machine bootable and *appears* to back out the SP1 changes. However, if you do a check on My Computer > Properties you'll see it says SP1 is installed even though the SP1 installer says it failed. I haven't figured out whether the SP installed or not and I don't have time yet to go crawling through DLL versions to find out.

    I've tried manually re-installing the SP1 from the downloaded (non-WSUS, non-Windows Update) offline installer on a few afflicted machines. Every one of them dies during the initial install claiming that some "windows component" needed for install isn't present. There's a "helpful" link in the error that says something like "why is this happening." It leads to an MS web page that says some OEM installs omit certain Windows Components (it doesn't say which ones) and -- surprise surprise! -- says you can *easily* fix the problem by RE-INSTALLING WINDOWS. Pardon me while I go strangle the idiot that came up with this web page.

    If anyone can find some commonality in these failures, I'm all ears.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Unhappy

      MS demonstrate TEST is a four letter word to be avioded

      Whilist some problems are likely to sneak through in a major software change, the fact you have a 15%+ fail rate indicates Micro$haft is simply not testing is products in any meaningful way.

      The suggestion here is never deploy MS SPs until you have to, and even then, do your own integration testing, and backup everything.

  39. bex

    not had a problem her

    I have updated over 20 pcs mixed 32/64 bit only problem one of them had to install a fix for something missing before the service pack would take. This report smacks of the so called kinect problem the bbc reported that was nothing

  40. anarchic-teapot

    I suppose I should be grateful

    that SP1 wouldn't even install on my OEM home PC. At least it may have saved me hours of swearing and a rollback.

    Now I can confidently leave all the bug hunting and swearing to Microsoft. Good luck with it, guys.

  41. Patrick Bateman

    This saved me

    Praise be to the geek who worked this out (first reply in the thread):

    http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-system/fatal-error-c0000034-applying-update-operation-282/bd99ead9-ece9-48af-9ad8-3c0377d01301

    My laptop went from brick to fully working in less than 20 minutes, but woe betide anyone who's even slightly scared of getting their hands dirty with an OS. And it was the FIRST time in as long as I remember that I just OK'd a Windows update to install without looking at it first! >_< It was all going so well with Win7...

    1. hplasm
      Grenade

      So

      the trouble with Win7 is you really need to use the command line to get it working?

      *zing*

      1. Chika
        Boffin

        Getting your hands dirty

        I sometimes wonder if some users are a bit too coddled with their GUI worlds (whatever flavour). Mind you, I suppose I'm old enough to remember when computers had switch registers and paper tape readers, so what do I know?

  42. tony 33

    backup sorted?

    Well i didn't have a problem with mine!

    running win7 home premium, but i wonder if the backup still corrupts DVRr/w's a few weeks after you forst use it?

    i am loathed to bugger another one again, having tried two different laptops and numerous dvd's and all end up with same problem although if formatted they work fine for anything else !

  43. Anonymous Coward
    FAIL

    Its all about SBS....

    I'm the guy that reported this to the register, and to all those that say why didnt people test before approving the update in WSUS need to understand that the majority of people affected by the c0000034 fatal error are people with SBS2008 servers and OEM factory image machines. In this situation, SBS2008 is preconfigured to deploy service packs automatically to clients. As soon as it became a critical update, thats when the problem went widespread. The support company i work for (Pyranet UK Ltd) have several clients with this setup, and its caused a fair few issues for them. MS need to sort this out!!!

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Did anyone review SBS2008 WSUS settings

      Or did they just assume that Microsoft's choices were the right ones for their company?

      Although a rank amateur with WSUS having installed it on our SBS setup I went into it and looked at the settings and set it so that no update was installed without someone saying Yes to it. And then after the list of updates got updated each month I'd go through and OK them one at a time. Anything related to a critical system, eg Exchange, I'd hold off on for a week to see if any bugs crept out of the woodwork.

  44. ColonelClaw
    Unhappy

    Anyone had this problem?

    The only change I've noticed on my machine is that it takes considerably longer to boot up. The extra time comes after the BIOS gubbins and before when it says "Starting Windows" or whatever. The screen goes black and I get an old DOS-style flashing "_" cursor at the top left of my screen that stays there for about 10 seconds before Windows starts loading. Anyone else had this issue?

  45. probedb
    WTF?

    No problems here

    Updated both my machines (64-bit) when SP1 came out and had zero problems since.

  46. thomasthetanker
    Thumb Up

    Alternatively with no Reg tweaks

    http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/w7itprogeneral/thread/608ecca8-b815-4ff6-8f3c-a828518434a7

    INSTRUCTIONS:

    01. Reboot your computer while it's starting up.

    02. When your computer starts up again, choose the option "Launch Startup Repair"

    --> PIC: http://notebooks.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/01/Recov-1.jpg

    03. When the Startup repair starts, click cancel.

    04. After you click cancel it will show a box. Click "Don't Send"

    --> PIC: http://i52.tinypic.com/xgjriw.png

    05. Click the link "View advanced options for recovery and support"

    06. In the new window click Command Prompt at the bottom.

    --> PIC: http://i51.tinypic.com/50imu8.png

    07. In Command Prompt type this and press enter: %windir%\system32\notepad.exe

    08. Notepad will open. In notepad go to File-->Open.

    09. Change the type of files notepad views from .txt to All Files (see pic)

    --> PIC: http://i51.tinypic.com/35nd74z.png

    10. Now in Notepad, go to C:\Windows\winsxs\ (or whichever drive Windows is installed on)

    11. In that folder, find pending.xml and make a copy of it

    12. Now open the original pending.xml (it will load really slow because the file is huge)

    13. Press CNTRL+F and search for the following exactly: 0000000000000000.cdf-ms

    14. Delete the following text (yours will be a little different):

    --> PIC: http://i54.tinypic.com/adzpzp.png

    Your PC might not have all 3 sections of code (, , ). Just make sure you delete section "Checkpoint" and whatever other sections have "000000000000000.cdf-ms". They will be right next to eachother.

    15. Save the file, close notepad, close command prompt, restart your computer.

    Once your computer starts up, do a normal startup (it may stall for 5-10 minutes at the "starting windows" screen, but leave it going) and the Service Pack will install some more stuff and restart a few times and then everything should be working! For some people, it reverts everything and cancels the service pack installation. For other people, the service pack installation completes. Either result is fine.

    1. zourtney
      Thumb Up

      This works

      I posted this link earlier, but it's "buried" back on page 1. This is the procedure which got my machine working again, +1!

      Side note: the Command Prompt (step 6) is only available to the Administrator account. The "Administrator" account was disabled on my machine as I the sole user and had admin privileges. Ultimately, the file had to be edited from a different machine.

      Hope this helps someone...

  47. PR_test

    wait for aslong as possable before deploying service pack

    ya I think that this another case of you should wait till at least SP1 or SP2 is out on any system before upgrading. Microsoft are a bit slow, bless em.... who knew

    http://patrickrice.net/blog/

  48. Anonymous Coward
    Stop

    Just stop it now, ok....?

    I think El Reg should prevent comments on any articles which points out flaws in any personal computer OS, these comment threads always end up at the same places...

    <start>Microsoft bad</start>

    <middle>Linux great</middle>

    <end>It's just personal preference</end>

    Obviously there is a lot of fluff and insults in between but they always follow the same structure.

  49. GaryK
    Jobs Halo

    DaBoss

    If you have a machine with fast hardware, Windows and spend half a weekend rebuilding it is it still faster then a Mac with lesser specs?

  50. D. M

    Is this the standard?

    MS always release their alpha version to public, then doing the beta version as SP1, and then maybe you get somewhere close to ready to release version.

    The first thing with any major MS update, is to wait and let someone else test it first.

  51. Anonymous Coward
    Troll

    all this argument about windows vs linux is silly

    because everybody knows OSX is the most superior operating system.

  52. K
    FAIL

    p0wn3d

    This struck us last week, took out 1/3 of the PC's our network.. we had to re-install all the machines, fortunately we managed to get everybody back up and running within a couple of hours.

  53. Henry Wertz 1 Gold badge

    regedit, service packs

    "As an ubuntu user since version 5.10.... #

    ...and various BSDs before that, I'd like to point out that all operating systems have bugs, even Linux."

    NEVER!!! Linux is perfect!!11one.

    But seriously, I am a little disappointed in Microsoft releasing these machine-killing service packs -- they did it before with an XP service pack, where certain OEMs installed an Intel driver on AMD systems, it worked fine until I think SP2 (or maybe SP3?) was installed then they'd drop dead. Now, again with the 7 service pack.

    ------------------------------------------------------------

    @Big Bear, re: "Joking aside, I really should upgrade but I need to build up the enthusiasm to find all the drivers and support for the various bits of bobs inside the machine and then fiddle so that it works. Maybe once this darn project delivers I can set a weekend aside..."

    You probably don't need to. I've run updates from 8.04 up to 10.04 then 10.10, and I didn't have to reinstall a thing. My parents even have the Samsung-provided driver for their CLP-510 (it had SLIGHTLY better color matching than the open source driver) and THAT kept working after going from 8.04 all the way to 10.10. If you don't have an option showing to upgrade, you run "update-manager -d" and then you do. Of course I'd still wait for your project to deliver, doing an upgrade in the middle of a project could be a bad idea.. but I think you'll be surprised at how smooth it goes.

    ---------------

    RE: Everyone who brings up the Linux command line. I have one response: Regedit. You seriously cannot pretend that starting regedit, going in the registry to "Local Users"->"Blah de blah"->"The fourth choice", inserting a string object called "foobaz", and putting in "{ABC12-2345-CDE-DEADBEEF}" for foobaz is in any sense easier than having to go open /etc/foobar with a text editor and put "somejunk=1" in there. The reality is, in this day and age, normal Linux users don't have to crack open a text editor, and most Windows users probably do not crack open regedit.

  54. WireBug
    FAIL

    MWAHAHAHAHA

    Turn of WSUS??? For real? That comment is a little extreme. If you are using WSUS just tell it not to install the Service Pack.

    When I heard W7 SP1 was coming I immediatly turned off deployment of service packs for Win 7 until I know it is not going to crash half my users PC's... thankfully I did since it appears to have a negetive impact on OEM installs....

    I am astounded that you would simply tell people to turn off WSUS completely.... sheesh

  55. Anonymous Coward
    Grenade

    Wow What a surprise

    Vista is a a hunk of junk. Win7 is vista with a lot of optomization. Updates and service packs, ontop of hideous legacy, and lockout engineered complexity. It can only end in tears.

    The question is... When?

  56. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    What would you expect from MicroSUCKS

    Did anyone expect anything different than more of the past?

  57. Hans 1
    Boffin

    Software Update Issues

    If it ain't broke don't fix it DOES NOT APPLY TO SOFTWARE, there are bugs in code that allow exploits. You should keep your software up-to-date for that matter.

    Of the many OS's I have used in time, I can say the following:

    Windows NT4: seen BSOD after SP4 and SP6 installations.

    Windows 2000: seen BSOD with SP3 and SP4, iirc.

    Windows XP, to this day, I have witnessed BSOD's after installing every SP (SP1, SP2 and SP3), not on the same machine but on multiple machines, with various configs, ... I used to work in technical support.

    Linux (user since 2001: Suse 7.0-9.0, then Ubuntu dapper drake, now Debian) update issues mostly with Ubuntu, I switched to Ubuntu when automatic updates in Suse changed my glibc without updating my shells := screwed. With Ubuntu, I have had "many" issues upgrading, the worst being the idiotic switch to ash from bash so I switched to Debian, happy ever since.

    Mac OS (user since 2001: two kernel panics with 10.2 caused by Norton, experienced in the lab - I was working for Norton, none since)

    Solaris: One thing about Solaris is, you would spend more time finding the update on sun.com than anything else ... never had issues after installing the updates, once I found em that is ... ;-).

    FreeBSD: never experienced any issues updating.

  58. Tigra 07
    Pint

    Well, i'm glad i missed out...

    As of yet i've skipped this update until they at least know what's causing the problems.

    I learned long ago not to be the first to install an update.

    Keep us updated Reg.

  59. calumg
    FAIL

    Failed for me

    Needs about 6 GB of free disk space to install, yet I only had 1GB free. The feedback from Windows Update was atrocious (just an opaque error code with no useful help link), so I had to manually install the SP to find out what was wrong. Now I have big hassles repartitioning my C: drive :(

    1. stillious
      Grenade

      Errm

      http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/learn-how-to-install-windows-7-service-pack-1-sp1

  60. 4barrelcarb
    Flame

    Microsoft needs to test updates !

    If you have automatic updates set up at all your workstations there is no way to avoid installtion of SP1 after it has downloaded. I had 6 PCS affected with that fatal C00000034 error on the 9th and at the time Microsoft was NOT even aware of the issue. Thank GOD I found a fix that day here:

    http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en/w7itproinstall/thread/1c9a7151-b48c-4a98-aae7-a4b82682ea8e#bcabda57-7338-499f-aee2-d708e76df315

    I was able to bring stations back up without losing anything.What I didnt know was that the restore points I had set up were erased because of this update. Ironically the remaining windows 7 stations installed with no issues but appear to have slowed down performance the next day.

    Businesses CANNOT AFFORD to be down and Microsoft needs to make sure they test thier updates thoroughly. We would need a crystal ball to tell us when we shoud turn on or disable WSUS.

This topic is closed for new posts.

Other stories you might like