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Recente "geheime" update van Win update verhindert reinstall updates na repair
Microsoft's stealth updates stymie XP repairs
Windows Updates' silent upgrade blocks patches needed after
restoring XP
Gregg Keizer
September 27, 2007 (Computerworld) -- The contentious stealth update that Microsoft delivered to customers this summer
blocks 80 patches and fixes from installing after Windows XP is restored using its
"repair" feature, researchers said today.
Scott Dunn, who first reported the problem in a story posted Thursday
morning to the "Windows Secrets" newsletter, said that users
who reinstall Windows XP with the repair option cannot retrieve the full set of
updates from Windows Update (WU). The problem, he said, has been traced to the
so-called "stealth update" to WU which Microsoft has acknowledged
sending to users beginning in July.
Two weeks ago, Dunn broke the story of the background
updates, which were sent to most non-corporate Windows XP and Vista
users. The updates were delivered and installed without prior notification,
even when the PC's owner had told the operating system not to download or
install updates without notification and permission.
The revelation launched a firestorm of protest from users, which in turn
prompted Microsoft
to defend the practice as well as say it would think about ways to
clarify its update policies.
"Two weeks ago we said that the silent update was harmless," said
Dunn today. "But now we're saying it is a problem."
That problem affects any user who restores Windows XP using the setup CD's
"repair" option, sometimes also called an "in-place
reinstallation" because it reinstalls the operating system files without
disturbing the applications and data already on the disk drive. Because repair
is essentially a roll-back to XP's original state, the OS must be updated with
all subsequent patches and hotfixes using WU. A system bought soon after
Windows XP SP2 was released, for example, would need to download and install
about three years' worth of updates.
After a repair, XP defaults to the "Automatic" setting for
Automatic Updates, which means WU is immediately updated to version
7.0.600.381, the version pushed to PCs by the summer's undercover upgrade, said
Dunn. Seven of the DLL (dynamic link library) files that make up 7.0.600.381,
however, fail to register themselves with Windows. That, in turn, keeps XP from
successfully installing approximately 80 of the most recent patches and fixes.
In a normal, non-repair situation, there's no indication of a glitch, since
DLLs by the same name have previously been keyed into Windows' registry.
"On a repaired copy of XP, however, no such registration has occurred, and
failing to register the new DLLs costs Windows Update the ability to install
any patches," he said
Dunn pointed out workarounds, which included installing an older version of
WU over the top of 7.0.600.381. "Windows Secrets" has also posted
instructions for creating a batch file that registers the seven DLLs.
While the registration failure and the unsuccessful patch installations
aren't directly related to the fact that Microsoft didn't disclose the silent
WU updates, Dunn sees it as part of a bigger, and disturbing, picture.
"It's part of the whole problem with the silent update, and all part of
the pattern of Microsoft's sloppiness," he said. "They're keeping us
out of the loop. They're not working well with the IT community."
If anyone needed proof that stealth updates are a bad idea, Microsoft's
defense of the practice notwithstanding, this is it, said Dunn. "IT needs
to test updates for this very reason. It's why companies like to download and
test updates before they install to the rest of the network," he said.
It's not clear how long WU has prevented post-repair updates, but searches
through Microsoft's support newsgroups revealed questions about similar
behavior as long ago as June. Responses by other users, including some with
Most Valued Professional (MVP) designation -- a honorific Microsoft gives to
users who make major contributions to the Windows community -- offered advice
much like Dunn's. Several of them pointed users to the support document KB916259.
The earliest such postings, however, preceded the silent WU update to
version 7.0.600.381. When questioned about the discrepancy, Dunn acknowledged
the similarities, but in an e-mail said that the two issues were different. He
cited several inconsistencies, including an error message called out in the
support document that doesn't appear in his test machines.
In fact, Microsoft has updated WU twice since late May: the July-August
silent update and a visible update rolled out in June. That update was designed
to fix a long-standing
problem with Automatic Updates in which the PCs' CPUs maxed out at
100%.
Microsoft was not available for comment early Thursday morning.
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