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event errors
I have all these evt errors and I hope the file I am attaching is
ledgable. There sure is something wrong according to the EH. Bill |
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#2
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event errors
"Bill Cunningham" wrote in message ... I have all these evt errors and I hope the file I am attaching is ledgable. There sure is something wrong according to the EH. Bill Your log file is legible but it does not tell us a great deal because it fails to display any of the extended error messages. It appears that some MSI installation package had a problem - whether it was minor or major I cannot tell. What did you install? Did the installation work? Does your PC still work? |
#3
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event errors
"Pegasus [MVP]" wrote in message ... Your log file is legible but it does not tell us a great deal because it fails to display any of the extended error messages. It appears that some MSI installation package had a problem - whether it was minor or major I cannot tell. What did you install? Did the installation work? Does your PC still work? Oh yes the pc still works. I just noticed some X's in a red circle and !'s in a yellow triangle. I thought there might be some errors. Bill |
#4
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event errors
On Nov 11, 11:47*am, "Bill Cunningham" wrote:
"Pegasus [MVP]" wrote in message ... Your log file is legible but it does not tell us a great deal because it fails to display any of the extended error messages. It appears that some MSI installation package had a problem - whether it was minor or major I cannot tell. What did you install? Did the installation work? Does your PC still work? * * Oh yes the pc still works. I just noticed some X's in a red circle and !'s in a yellow triangle. I thought there might be some errors. Bill No event in the Event Log should ever defy explanation. Red X, yellow triangle or anything. There should always be a reason that is sensible. I have not seen your events and instead of wasting back and forth message cycles, here is is a method to provide more information about individual events: To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel, Administrative Tools, Event Viewer. A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box enter: %SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc /s Click OK to launch the Event Viewer. The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System. Some logs may be almost or completely empty. Not every event it a problem, some are informational messages that things are working okay. Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs, Warnings will have yellow !s. Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event means there is a serious issue. Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with more information. On the right are black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The third button that looks like two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to your Windows clipboard. When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of your issue, click the third button under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can paste the details (right click, Paste or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis. To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear the log (backing up the log is offered), then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the time of your issue. |
#5
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event errors
"Jose" wrote in message ... No event in the Event Log should ever defy explanation. Red X, yellow triangle or anything. There should always be a reason that is sensible. I have not seen your events and instead of wasting back and forth message cycles, here is is a method to provide more information about individual events: To see the Event Viewer logs, click Start, Settings, Control Panel, Administrative Tools, Event Viewer. A shortcut to Event Viewer is to click Start, Run and in the box enter: %SystemRoot%\system32\eventvwr.msc /s Click OK to launch the Event Viewer. The most interesting logs are usually the Application and System. Some logs may be almost or completely empty. Not every event it a problem, some are informational messages that things are working okay. Each event is sorted by Date and Time. Errors will have red Xs, Warnings will have yellow !s. Information messages have white is. Not every Error or Warning event means there is a serious issue. Some are excusable at startup time when Windows is booting. If you double click an event, it will open a Properties windows with more information. On the right are black up and down arrow buttons to scroll through the open events. The third button that looks like two pages on top of each other is used to copy the event details to your Windows clipboard. When you find an interesting event that occurred around the time of your issue, click the third button under the up and down arrows to copy the details and then you can paste the details (right click, Paste or CTRL-V) the detail text back here for analysis. To get a fresh start on any Event Viewer log, you can choose to clear the log (backing up the log is offered), then reproduce your issue, then look at just the events around the time of your issue. Ok I have this figured out now I stopped the event handler and erased my original .evt files and turned the event handler back on. Here's the one error I have now. Event Type: Error Event Source: MsiInstaller Event Category: None Event ID: 1013 Date: 11/11/2009 Time: 1:06:04 PM User: YOUR-AED49BA6B9\Owner Computer: YOUR-AED49BA6B9 Description: Product: Adobe Reader 9.2 -- A process is running that cannot be shut down by Setup. Please either close all applications and run Setup again, or restart your computer and run Setup again. For more information, see Help and Support Center at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/events.asp. Data: 0000: 7b 41 43 37 36 42 41 38 {AC76BA8 0008: 36 2d 37 41 44 37 2d 31 6-7AD7-1 0010: 30 33 33 2d 37 42 34 34 033-7B44 0018: 2d 41 39 32 30 30 30 30 -A920000 0020: 30 30 30 30 31 7d 00001} |
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