A System Error Prevented The Service Pack From Installing
Contents |
be down. Please try the request again. Your cache administrator is webmaster. Generated Fri, 30 Sep 2016 05:19:32 GMT by s_bd40 (squid/3.5.20)
Comment Tags: Installation was not successful, Service Pack, SP1, Windows 7, Windows 7 Service pack 1 Having Microsoft released/made available Windows 7 Service Pack 1 via automatic updates and through win 7 sp1 will not install its download site, if you get “Installation was not successful” error while installing unable to install windows 7 sp1 Windows 7 SP1, here is how to fix it. There are two reasons you may get this error An inconsistency cannot install windows 7 sp1 in the Windows Service store, which is a feature required to install the service packs. An application such as antivirus or antispyware may be interfering with the installation of service pack Fixing http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/sp1-install-fails-with-a-system-error-prevented/4d1b178c-1322-4170-a9a9-f2d0c10042a2 “Installation Was not Successful “ Error Make sure you disabled your antivirus in your Computer before installing service pack. This error can be fix by running “System Update Readiness Tool” which fixes problems prevents Windows updates and install of service packs. Download, install the tool (which automatically runs after install) then try installing Service Pack again. Download System Update Readiness Tool « DreamScene Seven Brings http://techdows.com/2011/02/fix-windows-7-sp1-installation-was-not-successful-error.html Vista’s DreamScene feature to Windows 7 » Firefox 4 Beta 12 Download Now Available One Comment plusman August 26, 2011 @ 9:43 pm I had the same problem with Win 7 Sp1 refusing to install and I tried many of the steps outlined in various threads on different sites without success. I had a security program called Trusteer Rapport installed and in the end I had to uninstall it before I was finally able to get SP1 installed. Somehow Trusteer Rapport interfered with the installation (even though I stopped all non-essential programs booting up using msconfig; it still booted up. Hence the need to uninstall it) Thanks to a poster on another thread for suggesting this,. Reply Leave a Reply Cancel Your Name * Your Email * Your Website Receive Free Updates Enter your Email RSS; Twitter; G+; Facebook; YouTube; Venkat on G+; Twitter Popular Posts How to Change the Default PDF Viewer in Windows 10 Fix Screen Flashing Issue in Windows 10 How to Install AVG without Zen How to Top Up BSNL Broadband After FUP Limit or on Demand How to uninstall or remove Avast SafeZone Browser? Recent Posts Mortar Project: Mo
on the Details link on the error page, it displays the error code 0x800f081f Installation was not successful A system error prevented the service http://winplat.net/2012/08/26/error-0x800f081f-while-installing-service-pack-1-for-windows-2008-r2/ pack from installing. Please download and run the "Check for System Update http://www.tech-recipes.com/rx/11718/how-to-fix-a-failing-windows-7-service-pack-1-install/ Readiness" tool at http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=122602 Additionally, the event log displays two error event ids in the system logs: Event ID 7 and Event ID 8 from source: Service pack installer Solution: 1. First step, though not seldom useful for this issue, is to run System Update Readiness windows 7 tool and let it fix the corrupt manifest or you can check the logs and replace them. Click here is a reference to an article that shows how to troubleshoot using System Update Readiness tool 2. Check the Event ID 8 in the system log. It would show you the update that is causing the issue. In this case, it is windows 7 sp1 KB 976932 Notice the value for Identity in the above screenshot. To fix this, remove this package. Here is the command: dism /online /remove-package /packagename:PACKAGE_NAME where PACKAGE_NAME is the exact name string provided in the Identity section of the error. You can also get this value from the CheckSUR.log from the step 1. So, in our case the actual command would look like: dism /online /remove-package /packagename:Package_for_KB976932~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~6.1.1.17514 3. Reboot the server once the above command completes successfully and start the Windows 2008 R2 SP1 setup again. It should succeed this time. ← Previous post Next post → Categories Articles MS Exchange Tools Troubleshoot Tutorials Uncategorized Archives Archives Select Month September 2016 January 2016 December 2015 October 2015 September 2014 August 2014 April 2014 March 2014 January 2014 December 2013 October 2013 July 2013 June 2013 May 2013 January 2013 September 2012 August 2012 July 2012 May 2012 April 2012 December 2011 November 2011 October 2011 September 2011 July 2011 June 2011 May 2011 April 2011 March 2011 February 2011 January 2011 December 2010 October 2010 September 2010 August 2010 July
March 2, 2011 by Ben in Windows 7
Sometimes Windows patches or service packs simply will not install successfully. Following the definition of insanity and going back to Microsoft Update to try again and again does not usually fix the problem. Here are 3 things you can do to get that update installed. I recommend completing all of the following, in order, before trying to re-install the update: 1. Check the system drive for filesystem errors: -Open an Administrative command prompt (hit Windows key, type cmd, hit Ctrl + Shift + Enter) -Type: chkdsk c: /f -Hit "y" when prompted -Reboot and wait 2. Run the System File Checker: -Open an Administrative command prompt -Type: sfc /scannow -Wait for completion -Reboot 3. Download and run the Windows Update Readiness Tool: -Read and then follow the appropriate download link here -Run the downloaded Update Readiness Tool -Wait patiently for it to complete, this may take some time with little indication of progress until the end -See the logs after it finishes: %systemroot%\Logs\CBS\CheckSUR.log and CheckSUR.persist.log About Ben View more articles by Ben Share this article If this article helped you, please THANK the author by sharing. Your participation helps us to help others. The Conversation Follow the reactions below and share your own thoughts. http://twitter.com/Endophage David Lawrence An alternative solution. I know it was a problem with Vista, can't yet confirm it is with 7. If you dual boot and the MBR of your primary boot device doesn't have the windows bootloader in it the update may not work. If you're lucky enough to have separate HDDs for your windows install and other OSs just change the boot order in the bios temporarily for the update. If you don't have multiple HDDs, you can try using the windows recovery tools to re-image the MBR but then you have the pleasure of getting GRUB/Lilo/whatever back into the MBR. Jason Off and on, for years, I've tried installing service pack 1 for windows 7 as part of the other updates, and its never worked. So, I tried all the above: check disk, scan, rea