Microsoft Corrupted Error Report
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360 games PC games https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/kb/825444 Windows games Windows phone games Entertainment All Entertainment https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/joscon/2012/09/26/fixing-component-store-corruption-in-windows-8-and-windows-server-2012/ Movies & TV Music Business & Education Business Students & educators Developers Sale Sale Find a store Gift cards Products Software & services Windows Office Free downloads & security Internet error report Explorer Microsoft Edge Skype OneNote OneDrive Microsoft Health MSN Bing Microsoft Groove Microsoft Movies & TV Devices & Xbox All Microsoft devices Microsoft Surface All Windows PCs & tablets PC accessories Xbox & games Microsoft Lumia All has encountered a Windows phones Microsoft HoloLens For business Cloud Platform Microsoft Azure Microsoft Dynamics Windows for business Office for business Skype for business Surface for business Enterprise solutions Small business solutions Find a solutions provider Volume Licensing For developers & IT pros Develop Windows apps Microsoft Azure MSDN TechNet Visual Studio For students & educators Office for students OneNote in classroom Shop PCs & tablets perfect for students Microsoft in Education Support Sign in Cart Cart Javascript is disabled Please enable javascript and refresh the page Cookies are disabled Please enable cookies and refresh the page CV: {{ getCv() }} English (United States) Terms of use Privacy & cookies Trademarks © 2016 Microsoft
and Windows Server 2012 ★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ joscon [Microsoft]September 26, 2012173 Share 0 0 One of the most used tools when fixing corruption for Windows Vista, 7, 2008 and 2008 R2 was the System Update and Readiness Tool (KB947821), commonly called CheckSUR. The CheckSUR tool was an excellent way for most people to see what corruption had happened on their store, and potentially fix that corruption if the tool contained the payload to do so. I’ve written in the past how to use this mechanism to also fix corruption when the CheckSUR utility doesn’t include the payload for your files to “fool” CheckSUR into resolving the problem without needing to do all sorts of whacky permission changes (http://blogs.technet.com/b/joscon/archive/2010/05/26/using-checksur-and-update-packages-to-fix-corruption.aspx). The way this works in Windows 8 and Windows Server 2012 is different, in a fantastic way. It’s called Inbox Corruption Repair and it brings the functionality of CheckSUR into Windows rather than requiring a separate download to get the utility like you do now. This is exposed in two ways, the first is really unseen by the end user and happens when we detect a corrupted state when attempting to install fixes via Windows Update. When this happens, we'll fix the corruption silently and then re-install the prior packages. The manual way touse this tool is via DISM. The way this is exposed is via the DISM /Cleanup-Image functionality. Here’s what the available switches do: /CheckHealth: This checks to see if a component corruption marker is already present in the registry. We’ll inform the user if there is corruption but nothing is fixed or logged anywhere. This is merely a quick way to see if corruption currently exists. Think of it as a read-only CHKDSK. This operation should be almost instantaneous. /ScanHealth: This checks for component store corruption and records that corruption to the C:\Windows\Logs\CBS\CBS.log but no corruption is fixed using this switch. This is useful for logging what, if any, corruption exists. This operation takes ~5-10mins. /RestoreHealth: This checks for component store corruption, records the corruption to C:\Windows\Logs\CBS\CBS.log and FIXES the corruption using Windows Update. This operation takes ~10-15mins or more depending on the level of corruption. As an example, if you wanted to run this utility against your local component store to check for corruption and you wanted it to repair everything as it found it you would run the following command: DI