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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
I've reported about my SP2 installation failure already:
Subject: SP2 Disaster for XP here; Not solved yet. The previous threads appear dead; I'm continuing my story here. Briefly, I can't boot form the drive that I installed SP2 to. To remedy the problem, I tired... A. system restore Result: Didn't help B. uninstalling SP2 using "1. At the command prompt in Recovery Console, type the following lines. Press ENTER after each line. cd $NtServicePackUninstall$\Spuninst batch spuninst.txt exit" Result: it said "The system cannot find the file or directory specified" (System Restore probably already removed the file.) C. A repair install of Win XP Result: error code, a stop code, 0x0000007B (4 parameters) http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;324103 The solution has to be in resolving this. D. I called and emailed MS, Phone-in Case # SRX040824605385 Result: email back saying it was a duplicate case to the phone-in case, so they were closing the email case. (Thursday morning will be 48 hrs since I called. They said they'd be in touch by that time.) So I'm ready to tackle the 0x0000007B problem. I'm going to try the driver issue possibility first. On http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;324103 "Device Driver Issues You may receive a "Stop 0x0000007B" error message in the following scenarios: A device driver that the computer boot controller needs is not configured to start during the startup process. A device driver that the computer boot controller needs is corrupted. Information in the Windows XP registry (information related to how the device drivers load during startup) is corrupted. Windows XP requires a miniport driver to communicate with the hard disk controller that is used to start your computer. If Windows XP does not supply a device driver for your controller or if Windows XP is using a corrupted or incompatible driver, you must replace the driver with a valid copy that is compatible with your controller and Windows XP. During the first phase of the Windows XP installation, Setup displays the following message at the bottom of the screen: Press F6 if you have to install a third-party SCSI or RAID driver. Press F6 and then follow the instructions to install a mass-storage device driver from your Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM). For additional information about using F6 to load an OEM device driver to support, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 314859 Limited OEM driver support is available with F6 during Windows XP Setup To determine if your hard disk controller is compatible with Windows XP and to obtain information about drivers that are included on the Windows XP CD-ROM or that are available for download, see the latest Windows XP Hardware Compatibility List (HCL). For additional information about the latest Windows XP HCL, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 314062 The latest Windows XP hardware compatibility list If your hard disk controller is not listed on the HCL, contact the manufacturer of your computer, system board, or hard disk controller for information about the availability of a driver. Microsoft does not guarantee that a resolution is available for non-HCL equipment. For additional information, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 315239 Microsoft support policy for hardware that does not appear on the Windows HCL If the System hive in the Windows XP registry is corrupted, Windows XP may not be able to load the miniport device driver that the boot controller requires. To resolve this issue, restore a registry backup. For additional information about restoring a registry backup, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 307545 How to recover from a corrupted registry that prevents Windows XP from starting " I have another working non-SP2 Win XP drive that I'm using to operate. The drive I installed SP2 to is currently attached as a slave. I can see everything on the drive. What does "miniport driver" mean? is that different from a regular driver? -- ********************* * Nehmo Sergheyev * ********************* |
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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
What does "miniport driver" mean? is that different from a regular
driver? See: http://www.viaarena.com/?PageID=342 -max -- To help you stay safe see: http://www.geocities.com/maxpro4u/madmax.html This message is virus free as far as I can tell. Change nomail.afraid.org to neo.rr.com so you can reply (nomail.afraid.org has been set up specifically for use in Usenet. Feel free to use it yourself.) |
#3
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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
"Nehmo Sergheyev" wrote in message ... I've reported about my SP2 installation failure already: Subject: SP2 Disaster for XP here; Not solved yet. The previous threads appear dead; I'm continuing my story here. Briefly, I can't boot form the drive that I installed SP2 to. To remedy the problem, I tired... A. system restore Result: Didn't help B. uninstalling SP2 using "1. At the command prompt in Recovery Console, type the following lines. Press ENTER after each line. cd $NtServicePackUninstall$\Spuninst batch spuninst.txt exit" Result: it said "The system cannot find the file or directory specified" (System Restore probably already removed the file.) C. A repair install of Win XP Result: error code, a stop code, 0x0000007B (4 parameters) http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;324103 The solution has to be in resolving this. snip snip It is now hard to tell what all is corrupted. At this point I would write zero's to the disk and use a slipstreamed WXP SP2 install disk to start from the gate. Have on hand the latest chipset software and the latest drivers for all the hardware. |
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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 02:26:10 -0400, "Frank" wrote:
"Nehmo Sergheyev" wrote in message This may be something I liven through myself... I've reported about my SP2 installation failure already: Subject: SP2 Disaster for XP here; Not solved yet. The previous threads appear dead; I'm continuing my story here. Briefly, I can't boot form the drive that I installed SP2 to. How are you accessing the system, then? I'm assuming you dropped the HD into another host PC and are running that PC's XP installation? To remedy the problem, I tired... A. system restore Result: Didn't help The SR you ran will not be able to SR a HD from another installation, because the viewpoint will be its own and not of the OS that is not running. This is the same issue that bedevils clearing malware under similar circumstances, where registry clean-up is required. Not only that, the host PCs SR may destroy whatever SR data there may have been on the dropped-in HD. It is now hard to tell what all is corrupted. Yes, the repair install wasn't a good move. I can think of two possible issues he 1) Your PC uses Prescott CPU and XP won't boot after SP2 This I have lived through. The fix I used (thanks, Cari): - CMOS setup, disable L1 and L2 cache - boot XP; expect it to be so slow, looks like it's hanged - Add/Remove, uninstall SP2 - CMOS setup, enable L1 and L2 cache But after a "repair" install, all bets are off. See http://cquirke.mvps.org/reinst.htm 2) You have lost HD's pre-OS bootability Suspect this if the system boots off HD via XP CD left in the drive, but not directly. Expect to find gaps in this sequence that booting via the XP CD will bypass: - the relevant HD is the first HD seen, and/or - the relevant HD is set to boot by CMOS - MBR code is correct - your primamry partition is set as active - PBR code is correct, and can "see" C:\NTLDR etc. 3) NTOSKrnl is in the wrong place By "wrong place", I mean physically on the HD. This can affect any OS install, upgrade or SP that creates a new NTOSKrnl.exe in a position on the physical HD that is "out of reach" for the BIOS's addressing. Say your BIOS can only address the first 8G of the HD directly. The boot code has to rely on this to reach NTOSKrnl.exe to load it; thereafter XP's native HD addressing kicks in and BIOS's 8G horizon is no longer a limit. But the new NTOSKrnl.exe is 8G away. One way to ensure this never happens is to keep C: 8G, etc. ;-) At this point I would write zero's to the disk and use a slipstreamed WXP SP2 install disk to start from the gate. Have on hand the latest chipset software and the latest drivers for all the hardware. If it's (1) and you haven't already FUBAR'd things, then you can survive this. Else YMMV. The "repair" install worries me, tho. -------------- ---- --- -- - - - - "I think it's time we took our friendship to the next level" 'What, gender roles and abuse?' -------------- ---- --- -- - - - - |
#5
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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
-cquirke (MVP Win9x)-
How are you accessing the system, then? I'm assuming you dropped the HD into another host PC and are running that PC's XP installation? - Nehmo - I have a 15 GB HD with pre-SP2 XP on it (it was previously on the shelf). I'm running off that as the master with the 120 GB HD (the one with the failed SP2 install) as a slave. -cquirke (MVP Win9x)- The SR you ran will not be able to SR a HD from another installation, because the viewpoint will be its own and not of the OS that is not running. This is the same issue that bedevils clearing malware under similar circumstances, where registry clean-up is required. - Nehmo - I did SR in the third boot-up after SP2 on the 120 GB HD. Task Manager started, and I could get to SR. After that, it wouldn't boot up at all. Then I did a repari instal, still on the 120 GB HD only. I later attached the 15 GB HD. -cquirke (MVP Win9x)- Not only that, the host PCs SR may destroy whatever SR data there may have been on the dropped-in HD. It is now hard to tell what all is corrupted. Yes, the repair install wasn't a good move. I can think of two possible issues he 1) Your PC uses Prescott CPU and XP won't boot after SP2 - Nehmo - CPU Type AMD Athlon XP-A, 2079 MHz (6.25 x 333) 2800+ Have to leave for job right now. Thanks for responding -cquirke (MVP Win9x)- This I have lived through. The fix I used (thanks, Cari): - CMOS setup, disable L1 and L2 cache - boot XP; expect it to be so slow, looks like it's hanged - Add/Remove, uninstall SP2 - CMOS setup, enable L1 and L2 cache But after a "repair" install, all bets are off. See http://cquirke.mvps.org/reinst.htm 2) You have lost HD's pre-OS bootability Suspect this if the system boots off HD via XP CD left in the drive, but not directly. Expect to find gaps in this sequence that booting via the XP CD will bypass: - the relevant HD is the first HD seen, and/or - the relevant HD is set to boot by CMOS - MBR code is correct - your primamry partition is set as active - PBR code is correct, and can "see" C:\NTLDR etc. 3) NTOSKrnl is in the wrong place By "wrong place", I mean physically on the HD. This can affect any OS install, upgrade or SP that creates a new NTOSKrnl.exe in a position on the physical HD that is "out of reach" for the BIOS's addressing. Say your BIOS can only address the first 8G of the HD directly. The boot code has to rely on this to reach NTOSKrnl.exe to load it; thereafter XP's native HD addressing kicks in and BIOS's 8G horizon is no longer a limit. But the new NTOSKrnl.exe is 8G away. One way to ensure this never happens is to keep C: 8G, etc. ;-) At this point I would write zero's to the disk and use a slipstreamed WXP SP2 install disk to start from the gate. Have on hand the latest chipset software and the latest drivers for all the hardware. If it's (1) and you haven't already FUBAR'd things, then you can survive this. Else YMMV. The "repair" install worries me, tho. - Nehmo - It's not horrible. I can see everything on the 120 GB HD. So I'm not going to lose any data. I really gotta go now. |
#6
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SP2 Disaster Continued, _still_ not solved
On Thu, 26 Aug 2004 19:37:05 GMT, "Nehmo Sergheyev"
-cquirke (MVP Win9x)- How are you accessing the system, then? I'm assuming you dropped the HD into another host PC and are running that PC's XP installation? - Nehmo - I have a 15 GB HD with pre-SP2 XP on it (it was previously on the shelf). I'm running off that as the master with the 120 GB HD (the one with the failed SP2 install) as a slave. That's what I thought - and it could be very bad news, or justr bad news. The host (running) installation will see its own self-centric SR control data, and even if it had access to your HD's SR backup content, it would not interpret it correctly in terms of your own installation on the HD that is now unbooted slave. Worst-case: SR destroys existing SR data stores on your HD, replacing them with new SR data that is managed from the perspective of the host. This is what happens in the prototypeware SR that WinME suffered, but XP is smarter than that in some ways at least (e.g. doesn't store *everything* from all HD volumes on C:, etc.) Best-case: XP SR may have the smarts to create its own installation-unique SR data subtree and populate that, without tearing up the SR subtree from your own XP installation. I've seen evidence that implies this, e.g. an SR-minitored USB stick used in two different XP PCs that had two different CLSID-named subtrees within the SR data base dir. Even best-case, it won't work, because even if it were to put files in the right place, the registry it updates won't be yours. The joy of best-case is that it doesn't smash up your SR data. 1) Your PC uses Prescott CPU and XP won't boot after SP2 - Nehmo - CPU Type AMD Athlon XP-A, 2079 MHz (6.25 x 333) 2800+ OK, then that doesn't apply ;-) Check http://jmfmvps.mvps.org/SP2.htm for good SR2 coverage; many of the articles there apply directly to some failure patterns I see in these threads, e.g. the STOP error (a "skin" add-on) and the "safe works, normal hangs/crashes" (UMAX scanner driver) etc. --------------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - Never turn your back on an installer program --------------- ----- ---- --- -- - - - |
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