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Upgrade XP asms error inquiry



 
 
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  #1  
Old June 18th 07, 04:14 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
Starlite
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default Upgrade XP asms error inquiry

Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise the
Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can attempt
to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock




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  #2  
Old July 10th 07, 12:22 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
David B, SWE
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 13
Default Upgrade XP asms error inquiry



"Starlite" wrote:

Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise the
Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can attempt
to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock

I am not sure this post is relevant to your problem. I do know that a file called ASMS does not exist on the Windows XP setup CDs, and that this has caused problems for XP users who are trying to repair their installations. Read on and see what you think.


Complaints in newsgroups, etc., about this "missing asms file" issue go back about five years. I personally have encountered the error at least three times in as many years. Microsoft's Knowledge Base article Q311755 -- the one that MVPs refer XP users to when they respond to this complaint -- is irrelevant and useless. What we have here is a serious bug in the Windows XP setup CD that MVPs probably do not know about. Not only is it a serious defect, one that affects virtually every copy of XP Professional Setup CD and DVD (I don't know about Home ed, never used it), but it is a defect that has never been acknowledged by Microsoft; there is no helpful KB article about it, no workaround.


It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now that
I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step through
the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error; 2)
how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the
KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week by
exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the list)
-- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files,
run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup, or
use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't
work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation using
the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and painless..."
The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair option
that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen showing
your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your
PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the correct
path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and no
way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for a
KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
(incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all the
above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you to
reinstall XP, and refund your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to
fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get to
the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition. The
third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram),
not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent XP
Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate it
if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in all
three cases where I have called upon their help over the past three years,
they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been worked
out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not minor!
I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.


  #3  
Old June 30th 10, 04:35 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
mohsin mohammed
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is that is searches for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to make a iso of the Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from asms to ASMS in the i386 folder and write it to another disc and try installing again



DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
09-Jul-07

"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now that
I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step through
the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error; 2)
how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the
KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week by
exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the list)
-- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files,
run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup, or
use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't
work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation using
the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and painless..."
The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair option
that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen showing
your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your
PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the correct
path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and no
way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for a
KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
(incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all the
above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you to
reinstall XP, and refund your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to
fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get to
the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition. The
third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram),
not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent XP
Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate it
if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in all
three cases where I have called upon their help over the past three years,
they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been worked
out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not minor!
I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.

Previous Posts In This Thread:

On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
Starlite wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise the
Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can attempt
to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock

On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now that
I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step through
the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error; 2)
how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the
KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week by
exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the list)
-- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files,
run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup, or
use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't
work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation using
the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and painless..."
The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair option
that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen showing
your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your
PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the correct
path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and no
way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for a
KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
(incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all the
above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you to
reinstall XP, and refund your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to
fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get to
the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition. The
third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram),
not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent XP
Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate it
if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in all
three cases where I have called upon their help over the past three years,
they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been worked
out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not minor!
I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.


Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx
  #4  
Old June 30th 10, 04:35 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
mohsin mohammed
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is that is searches for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to make a iso of the Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from asms to ASMS in the i386 folder and write it to another disc and try installing again



DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
09-Jul-07

"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now that
I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step through
the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error; 2)
how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the
KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week by
exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the list)
-- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files,
run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup, or
use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't
work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation using
the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and painless..."
The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair option
that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen showing
your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your
PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the correct
path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and no
way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for a
KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
(incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all the
above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you to
reinstall XP, and refund your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to
fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get to
the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition. The
third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram),
not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent XP
Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate it
if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in all
three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been worked
out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not minor!
I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.

Previous Posts In This Thread:

On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
Starlite wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise the
Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can attempt
to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock

On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now that
I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step through
the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error; 2)
how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the
KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week by
exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the list)
-- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files,
run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup, or
use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't
work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation using
the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and painless..."
The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair option
that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen showing
your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your
PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the correct
path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and no
way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for a
KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
(incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all the
above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you to
reinstall XP, and refund your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to
fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get to
the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition. The
third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram),
not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent XP
Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate it
if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in all
three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been worked
out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not minor!
I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.


Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx
  #5  
Old June 30th 10, 04:50 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
Hoyst Owen Petard
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

HoopleHead Eggheader alert.

Reply to a post from 2007 and change the subject.

Have you been in hibernation?

mohsin mohammed wrote in message
...
: Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is that is searches
for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to make a iso of the
Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from asms to ASMS in the i386 folder
and write it to another disc and try installing again
:
:
:
: DavidBSW wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: 09-Jul-07
:
: "Starlite" wrote:
:
:
:
: It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now
that
: I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step
through
: the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
: may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error;
2)
: how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why
the
: KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.
:
: 1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
: efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week
by
: exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I
thought)
: to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.
:
: You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
: and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
: startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list)
: -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
: Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg"
files,
: run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup,
or
: use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
: original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that
doesn't
: work either.
:
: 2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
: 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation
using
: the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..."
: The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair
option
: that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
: Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen
showing
: your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
: and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots
your
: PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
: find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the
correct
: path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no
ASMS
: file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and
no
: way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
: this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.
:
:
: At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for
a
: KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
: (incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all
the
: above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you
to
: reinstall XP, and refund your $80.
:
: 3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
: Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods"
to
: fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get
to
: the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
: not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
: second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
: that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition.
The
: third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the
hologram),
: not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
: the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
: CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "
:
: But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
: even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
: solution always fails.
:
: It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent
XP
: Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate
it
: if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
: know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in
all
: three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
: they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found"
is
: endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
: asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
: you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of
these
: steps makes any difference.
:
: I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been
worked
: out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not
minor!
: I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.
:
: Previous Posts In This Thread:
:
: On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
: Starlite wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: Hi,
:
: I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
: okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.
:
: Fatal Error
:
: One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
: installed. The paramete is incorrect.
: The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.
:
: I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise
the
: Cdrom.
:
: The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can
attempt
: to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.
:
: Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
: I'm not sure about this.
:
: Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
: takes me back to that panel again.
:
: Any help here please?
:
: Thanks
:
: rock
:
: On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
: DavidBSW wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: "Starlite" wrote:
:
:
:
: It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now
that
: I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step
through
: the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
: may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error;
2)
: how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why
the
: KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.
:
: 1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
: efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week
by
: exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I
thought)
: to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.
:
: You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
: and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
: startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list)
: -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
: Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg"
files,
: run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup,
or
: use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
: original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that
doesn't
: work either.
:
: 2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
: 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation
using
: the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..."
: The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair
option
: that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
: Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen
showing
: your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
: and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots
your
: PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
: find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the
correct
: path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no
ASMS
: file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and
no
: way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
: this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.
:
:
: At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for
a
: KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
: (incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all
the
: above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you
to
: reinstall XP, and refund your $80.
:
: 3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
: Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods"
to
: fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get
to
: the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
: not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
: second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
: that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition.
The
: third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the
hologram),
: not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
: the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
: CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "
:
: But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
: even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
: solution always fails.
:
: It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent
XP
: Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate
it
: if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
: know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in
all
: three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
: they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found"
is
: endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
: asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
: you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of
these
: steps makes any difference.
:
: I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been
worked
: out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not
minor!
: I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.
:
:
: Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
: Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks
:
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx


  #6  
Old June 30th 10, 04:50 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
Hoyst Owen Petard
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 18
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

HoopleHead Eggheader alert.

Reply to a post from 2007 and change the subject.

Have you been in hibernation?

mohsin mohammed wrote in message
...
: Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is that is searches
for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to make a iso of the
Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from asms to ASMS in the i386 folder
and write it to another disc and try installing again
:
:
:
: DavidBSW wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: 09-Jul-07
:
: "Starlite" wrote:
:
:
:
: It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now
that
: I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step
through
: the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
: may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error;
2)
: how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why
the
: KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.
:
: 1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
: efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week
by
: exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I
thought)
: to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.
:
: You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
: and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
: startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list)
: -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
: Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg"
files,
: run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup,
or
: use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
: original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that
doesn't
: work either.
:
: 2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
: 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation
using
: the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..."
: The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair
option
: that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
: Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen
showing
: your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
: and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots
your
: PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
: find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the
correct
: path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no
ASMS
: file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and
no
: way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
: this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.
:
:
: At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for
a
: KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
: (incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all
the
: above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you
to
: reinstall XP, and refund your $80.
:
: 3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
: Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods"
to
: fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get
to
: the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
: not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
: second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
: that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition.
The
: third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the
hologram),
: not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
: the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
: CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "
:
: But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
: even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
: solution always fails.
:
: It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent
XP
: Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate
it
: if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
: know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in
all
: three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
: they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found"
is
: endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
: asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
: you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of
these
: steps makes any difference.
:
: I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been
worked
: out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not
minor!
: I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.
:
: Previous Posts In This Thread:
:
: On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
: Starlite wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: Hi,
:
: I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1 and 2) and all is
: okay except near the finish I get this message and can't get past it.
:
: Fatal Error
:
: One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup could not be
: installed. The paramete is incorrect.
: The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is incorrect.
:
: I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it doesn't recognise
the
: Cdrom.
:
: The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup so I can
attempt
: to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever I can.
:
: Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the i\386 dir, but
: I'm not sure about this.
:
: Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue the setup which
: takes me back to that panel again.
:
: Any help here please?
:
: Thanks
:
: rock
:
: On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
: DavidBSW wrote:
:
: Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
: "Starlite" wrote:
:
:
:
: It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be brief, because now
that
: I've spent three days restoring my OS and apps, I don't want to step
through
: the XP CD setup steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
: may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP setup disk error;
2)
: how to reproduce the "missing asms file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why
the
: KB article Q31175 is unhelpful.
:
: 1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only after all other
: efforts to recover have failed. I got to this do-or-die place last week
by
: exporting and then deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I
thought)
: to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.
:
: You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot and its variants,
: and you know you can't boot to Safe mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after
: startup failure" (or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list)
: -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case, which no one in all of New
: Delhi understands. Without Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg"
files,
: run the Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT Backup,
or
: use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery Console, and copied the
: original five registry files from Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that
doesn't
: work either.
:
: 2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside Out" (Microsoft,
: 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to repair your Windows XP installation
using
: the Windows Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..."
: The same advice appears in other XP books. This is *not* the repair
option
: that appears right after "Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press
: Enter, not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the screen
showing
: your Windows installations (usually one), choose the correct installation,
: and *then* press R. The setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots
your
: PC. Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the system cannot
: find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you an input box to enter the
correct
: path of that file. However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no
ASMS
: file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around the error, and
no
: way (for any XP Professional user anywhere in the world) to continue past
: this point. The "repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.
:
:
: At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search Microsoft or Google for
a
: KB article that could help. Or, like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support
: (incident 1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you through all
the
: above steps, and then give up when you get to the ASMS error, advise you
to
: reinstall XP, and refund your $80.
:
: 3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that pertains to this issue,
: Q311755, under the section on the NTFS file system, offers three "methods"
to
: fix the problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you can get
to
: the command prompt -- but if you could run Windows in Safe Mode, you would
: not be using this last resort from the setup disk in the first place. The
: second method advises installing Windows in another partition; no thanks,
: that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS on the main partition.
The
: third method says to "use the original XP CDROM" (the one with the
hologram),
: not a copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms folder. If
: the folder is missing or the files that it contains are zero bytes, the
: CD-ROM was not burned correctly. "
:
: But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is no ASMS file,
: even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro setup CD. That's why this third
: solution always fails.
:
: It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in its omnipresent
XP
: Setup disk CD and offer some kind of workaround. I also would appreciate
it
: if Microsoft tech support representatives would stop pretending they don't
: know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about it, because in
all
: three cases where I have called upon thei help over the past three years,
: they have known when to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found"
is
: endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they don't bother
: asking you if you are using an original hologram XP setup disk or advising
: you to try a different CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of
these
: steps makes any difference.
:
: I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP have been
worked
: out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is perfect -- but this is not
minor!
: I suggest other XP Professional users do likewise.
:
:
: Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of Choice
: Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks
:
http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx


  #7  
Old June 30th 10, 05:40 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
Twayne[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,073
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

In ,
Hoyst Owen Petard typed:
HoopleHead Eggheader alert.

Reply to a post from 2007 and change the subject.

Have you been in hibernation?


I imagine it took that long to come up with the severe verbosity present in
this fictitious situation anyway. There are some good buzzwords used but
even so it's given away by the other mistakes and misnomers used here &
there. What a waste of good ether!


mohsin mohammed wrote in message
...
Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is
that is searches

for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to
make a iso of the Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from
asms to ASMS in the i386 folder and write it to another
disc and try installing again



DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
09-Jul-07

"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be
brief, because now that I've spent three days restoring my
OS and apps, I don't want to step through the XP CD setup
steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP
setup disk error; 2) how to reproduce the "missing asms
file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the KB article Q31175
is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only
after all other efforts to recover have failed. I got to
this do-or-die place last week by exporting and then
deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot
and its variants, and you know you can't boot to Safe
mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after startup failure"
(or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list) -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case,
which no one in all of New Delhi understands. Without
Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files, run the
Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT
Backup, or use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery
Console, and copied the original five registry files from
Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside
Out" (Microsoft, 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to
repair your Windows XP installation using the Windows
Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..." The same advice appears in other XP books.
This is *not* the repair option that appears right after
"Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press Enter,
not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the
screen showing your Windows installations (usually one),
choose the correct installation, and *then* press R. The
setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your PC.
Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the
system cannot find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you
an input box to enter the correct path of that file.
However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around
the error, and no way (for any XP Professional user
anywhere in the world) to continue past this point. The
"repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search
Microsoft or Google for a KB article that could help. Or,
like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support (incident
1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you
through all the above steps, and then give up when you get
to the ASMS error, advise you to reinstall XP, and refund
your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that
pertains to this issue, Q311755, under the section on the
NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to fix the
problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you
can get to the command prompt -- but if you could run
Windows in Safe Mode, you would not be using this last
resort from the setup disk in the first place. The second
method advises installing Windows in another partition; no
thanks, that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS
on the main partition. The third method says to "use the
original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram), not a
copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms
folder. If the folder is missing or the files that it
contains are zero bytes, the CD-ROM was not burned
correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is
no ASMS file, even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro
setup CD. That's why this third solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in
its omnipresent XP Setup disk CD and offer some kind of
workaround. I also would appreciate it if Microsoft tech
support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about
it, because in all three cases where I have called upon
thei help over the past three years, they have known when
to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they
don't bother asking you if you are using an original
hologram XP setup disk or advising you to try a different
CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP
have been worked out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is
perfect -- but this is not minor! I suggest other XP
Professional users do likewise.

Previous Posts In This Thread:

On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
Starlite wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1
and 2) and all is okay except near the finish I get this
message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup
could not be installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is
incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it
doesn't recognise the Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup
so I can attempt to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever
I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the
i\386 dir, but I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue
the setup which takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock

On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be
brief, because now that I've spent three days restoring my
OS and apps, I don't want to step through the XP CD setup
steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP
setup disk error; 2) how to reproduce the "missing asms
file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the KB article Q31175
is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only
after all other efforts to recover have failed. I got to
this do-or-die place last week by exporting and then
deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot
and its variants, and you know you can't boot to Safe
mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after startup failure"
(or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list) -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case,
which no one in all of New Delhi understands. Without
Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files, run the
Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT
Backup, or use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery
Console, and copied the original five registry files from
Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside
Out" (Microsoft, 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to
repair your Windows XP installation using the Windows
Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..." The same advice appears in other XP books.
This is *not* the repair option that appears right after
"Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press Enter,
not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the
screen showing your Windows installations (usually one),
choose the correct installation, and *then* press R. The
setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your PC.
Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the
system cannot find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you
an input box to enter the correct path of that file.
However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around
the error, and no way (for any XP Professional user
anywhere in the world) to continue past this point. The
"repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search
Microsoft or Google for a KB article that could help. Or,
like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support (incident
1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you
through all the above steps, and then give up when you get
to the ASMS error, advise you to reinstall XP, and refund
your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that
pertains to this issue, Q311755, under the section on the
NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to fix the
problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you
can get to the command prompt -- but if you could run
Windows in Safe Mode, you would not be using this last
resort from the setup disk in the first place. The second
method advises installing Windows in another partition; no
thanks, that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS
on the main partition. The third method says to "use the
original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram), not a
copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms
folder. If the folder is missing or the files that it
contains are zero bytes, the CD-ROM was not burned
correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is
no ASMS file, even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro
setup CD. That's why this third solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in
its omnipresent XP Setup disk CD and offer some kind of
workaround. I also would appreciate it if Microsoft tech
support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about
it, because in all three cases where I have called upon
thei help over the past three years, they have known when
to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they
don't bother asking you if you are using an original
hologram XP setup disk or advising you to try a different
CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP
have been worked out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is
perfect -- but this is not minor! I suggest other XP
Professional users do likewise.


Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of
Choice
Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks

http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx




  #8  
Old June 30th 10, 05:40 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware
Twayne[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,073
Default Simple answer for ASMS problem

In ,
Hoyst Owen Petard typed:
HoopleHead Eggheader alert.

Reply to a post from 2007 and change the subject.

Have you been in hibernation?


I imagine it took that long to come up with the severe verbosity present in
this fictitious situation anyway. There are some good buzzwords used but
even so it's given away by the other mistakes and misnomers used here &
there. What a waste of good ether!


mohsin mohammed wrote in message
...
Nothing is wrong with the computer.. the only thing is
that is searches

for "ASMS" and not "asms". Best thing to do would be to
make a iso of the Windows XP disc and modifiy the name from
asms to ASMS in the i386 folder and write it to another
disc and try installing again



DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
09-Jul-07

"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be
brief, because now that I've spent three days restoring my
OS and apps, I don't want to step through the XP CD setup
steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP
setup disk error; 2) how to reproduce the "missing asms
file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the KB article Q31175
is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only
after all other efforts to recover have failed. I got to
this do-or-die place last week by exporting and then
deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot
and its variants, and you know you can't boot to Safe
mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after startup failure"
(or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list) -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case,
which no one in all of New Delhi understands. Without
Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files, run the
Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT
Backup, or use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery
Console, and copied the original five registry files from
Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside
Out" (Microsoft, 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to
repair your Windows XP installation using the Windows
Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..." The same advice appears in other XP books.
This is *not* the repair option that appears right after
"Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press Enter,
not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the
screen showing your Windows installations (usually one),
choose the correct installation, and *then* press R. The
setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your PC.
Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the
system cannot find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you
an input box to enter the correct path of that file.
However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around
the error, and no way (for any XP Professional user
anywhere in the world) to continue past this point. The
"repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search
Microsoft or Google for a KB article that could help. Or,
like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support (incident
1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you
through all the above steps, and then give up when you get
to the ASMS error, advise you to reinstall XP, and refund
your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that
pertains to this issue, Q311755, under the section on the
NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to fix the
problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you
can get to the command prompt -- but if you could run
Windows in Safe Mode, you would not be using this last
resort from the setup disk in the first place. The second
method advises installing Windows in another partition; no
thanks, that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS
on the main partition. The third method says to "use the
original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram), not a
copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms
folder. If the folder is missing or the files that it
contains are zero bytes, the CD-ROM was not burned
correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is
no ASMS file, even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro
setup CD. That's why this third solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in
its omnipresent XP Setup disk CD and offer some kind of
workaround. I also would appreciate it if Microsoft tech
support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about
it, because in all three cases where I have called upon
thei help over the past three years, they have known when
to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they
don't bother asking you if you are using an original
hologram XP setup disk or advising you to try a different
CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP
have been worked out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is
perfect -- but this is not minor! I suggest other XP
Professional users do likewise.

Previous Posts In This Thread:

On Sunday, June 17, 2007 11:14 PM
Starlite wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
Hi,

I am upgrading my XP Pro 2600 to the latest XP (with SP1
and 2) and all is okay except near the finish I get this
message and can't get past it.

Fatal Error

One of the components that Windows needs to continue setup
could not be installed. The paramete is incorrect.
The setuperr.log file says \i386\asms The paramater is
incorrect.

I have googled a bit and found that it seems to be it
doesn't recognise the Cdrom.

The trouble is I don't know the best way to stop the setup
so I can attempt to change the Cdrom drives or do whatever
I can.

Some have said one can copy the Controls.man file from the
i\386 dir, but I'm not sure about this.

Every time I okay that message panel, it goes to continue
the setup which takes me back to that panel again.

Any help here please?

Thanks

rock

On Monday, July 09, 2007 7:22 PM
DavidBSW wrote:

Upgrade XP asms error inquiry
"Starlite" wrote:



It's as hard to be precise about this as it is to be
brief, because now that I've spent three days restoring my
OS and apps, I don't want to step through the XP CD setup
steps again. But I can summarize briefly for all MVPs who
may be listening: 1) what leads up to this Windows XP
setup disk error; 2) how to reproduce the "missing asms
file" bug on the XP setup CD; 3) why the KB article Q31175
is unhelpful.

1. A user elects this "repair" option in the XP Setup only
after all other efforts to recover have failed. I got to
this do-or-die place last week by exporting and then
deleting 10 registry keys that all pertained (I thought)
to an app that didn't properly uninstall itself.

You've tried "Last Known Good Configuration", Safe Boot
and its variants, and you know you can't boot to Safe
mode; you've tried "Don't reboot after startup failure"
(or whatever the wording is, toward the bottom of the
list) -- you'll get a Hex 7B error code in this case,
which no one in all of New Delhi understands. Without
Safe Mode, you cannot import saved "reg" files, run the
Reg.exe tool, restore a System State backup made with NT
Backup, or use System Restore. You've tried the Recovery
Console, and copied the original five registry files from
Repair subfolder of Sys32, and that doesn't work either.

2. According to the authoritative "Windows XP: Inside
Out" (Microsoft, 2001, p.815ff), "you may be able to
repair your Windows XP installation using the Windows
Setup program. . . . The repair option is quick and
painless..." The same advice appears in other XP books.
This is *not* the repair option that appears right after
"Welcome to Setup" screen. At that screen, press Enter,
not R. Then press F8 to accept the EULA, and from the
screen showing your Windows installations (usually one),
choose the correct installation, and *then* press R. The
setup program reloads XP OS files, then reboots your PC.
Soon after this reboot, you'll get a message saying the
system cannot find a file called "ASMS", and it gives you
an input box to enter the correct path of that file.
However, though an ASMS *folder* exists, there is no ASMS
file on *any* Windows XP setup disk, no way to work around
the error, and no way (for any XP Professional user
anywhere in the world) to continue past this point. The
"repair" option has to fail for everyone who tries it.


At this point, you write to a newsgroup or search
Microsoft or Google for a KB article that could help. Or,
like me, you call Microsoft Tech Support (incident
1038826788) about the problem -- they'll guide you
through all the above steps, and then give up when you get
to the ASMS error, advise you to reinstall XP, and refund
your $80.

3. The only Microsoft Knowledge Base article that
pertains to this issue, Q311755, under the section on the
NTFS file system, offers three "methods" to fix the
problem. The first, running RegEdit, can only work if you
can get to the command prompt -- but if you could run
Windows in Safe Mode, you would not be using this last
resort from the setup disk in the first place. The second
method advises installing Windows in another partition; no
thanks, that is no easier than reinstalling the whole OS
on the main partition. The third method says to "use the
original XP CDROM" (the one with the hologram), not a
copy. If the original can't be found, "look for the Asms
folder. If the folder is missing or the files that it
contains are zero bytes, the CD-ROM was not burned
correctly. "

But as stated above, while an ASMS folder exists, there is
no ASMS file, even on the hologram copy of the XP Pro
setup CD. That's why this third solution always fails.

It is time Microsoft publicly acknowledged this defect in
its omnipresent XP Setup disk CD and offer some kind of
workaround. I also would appreciate it if Microsoft tech
support representatives would stop pretending they don't
know about this issue. I am convinced they do know about
it, because in all three cases where I have called upon
thei help over the past three years, they have known when
to give up and offer a refund: "ASMS File Not Found" is
endgame; they all know it, and unlike the KB article, they
don't bother asking you if you are using an original
hologram XP setup disk or advising you to try a different
CD ROM drive, because they know that neither of these
steps makes any difference.

I don't plan to buy Vista until all the serious bugs in XP
have been worked out. I can handle minor bugs -- no OS is
perfect -- but this is not minor! I suggest other XP
Professional users do likewise.


Submitted via EggHeadCafe - Software Developer Portal of
Choice
Task Parallelism in C# 4.0 with System.Threading.Tasks

http://www.eggheadcafe.com/tutorials...dingtasks.aspx




  #9  
Old March 24th 11, 07:18 AM
koc12hi koc12hi is offline
banned
 
First recorded activity by PCbanter: Mar 2011
Posts: 6
Default

Thanks a lot for this awesome and superb sharing
its really an incredible and great work done
  #10  
Old April 26th 11, 07:19 AM
Stephen.joyce77 Stephen.joyce77 is offline
banned
 
First recorded activity by PCbanter: Apr 2011
Posts: 7
Default

Really its too informative and marvelous sharing
i like this
 




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