Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1 install breaks RDP

After installing Service Pack 1 via windows update on a Windows Server 2008 R2 machine the other day, I discovered that I could no longer use remote desktop connection to access the server remotely. At first I wasn’t sure if the whole service pack installation was botched, but further testing revealed that all other functions of this server were operating normally. A quick google search showed that I was not alone in experiencing this problem, in fact there is enough information out there to solve this without another blog post from yours truly, but there is a bit of conflicting information so I thought I would document my experience to hopefully help others.

The problem manifests itself like this:

You try to RDP the affected server and it goes through the enitre logon process, and just when you think it is going to fire up the remote desktop it bombs out. An event was logged in the application log in my case event 4005 with a source of Winlogon, stating ‘The Windows logon process has terminated unexpectedly’ (shown below), although I have read of slightly different errors on other blog posts. Checking the Terminal Services logs indicate that the logon has completed successfully.

Event 4005 Source Winlogon after Service Pack 1 install on Windows Server 2008 R2

This situation it turns out, occurs when both KB2621440 and KB2667402 are applied to a system before Service Pack 1 is applied, as they effectively leave some of the RDP DLL files out of sync, specifically rdpcorekmts.dll. Now, alot of the posts I read online stated that you simply needed to uninstall the KB2777402 update, reboot, and then reapply it to solve this problem. I tried this first and it did not work. Various posts also stated that RDP started working after the removal of this patch, again this was not the case for me although I am sure it is correct in some cases.

So the fix I used in the end was this:

Firstly I uninstalled both KB2621440 and KB2667402 via Control Panel, Uninstall a Program, View Installed Updates, and then rebooted the server. I expected the DLLs to be set back to a working state at this point but this was not the case. Luckily in my case I had physical access to the server. Other posts state that the two updates can be uninstalled remotely using the following commands if you do not have that luxury:

wmic /node:<SERVER> /user:<USER> process call create “powershell wusa /uninstall /kb:2667402 /quiet /forcerestart”

wmic /node:<SERVER> /user:<USER> process call create “powershell wusa /uninstall /kb:2621440 /quiet /forcerestart”

Note, that the commands above will restart the server

As RDP still didn’t work for me at this point contrary to other information, I ran:

sfc /scannow

This picked up some issues and required a reboot. After rebooting the server I was able to use RDP again. That was great, but didn’t help with the fact that the two patches that were removed were to address the Critical RDP vulnerability MS12-020. I certainly didn’t fancy not applying these patches to this server so I reapplied KB2621440 and KB2667402 via Windows Update, and rebooted the server. Thankfully after this I had a fully patched server and working RDP.

If you need to do all of this remotely and find that you still can’t RDP the server after removing the two patches using the commands above I recommend running sfc /scannow using PSEXEC:

psexec \\SERVER sfc /scannow

Then when the scan is finished performing a remote reboot using:

psexec \\SERVER shutdown -r -t 01

This should get your RDP back to a working state, and then you can reapply the removed updates. I have not corfirmed this but expect this fix will also work for Windows 7.

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Windows 7 SP1 installation fails with error 0x800f0818

I came across a peculiar problem today trying to install SP1 on a Windows 7 laptop. Whenever I ran the Windows 7 SP1 installer or tried to update to SP1 using Windows Update the installation failed with a cryptic error ‘0x800f0818‘. I tried various things such as running sfc /scannow and installing the Windows 7 System Readiness Tool (64 bit in my case), but neither reported problems.

After a bit of digging I found an entry in the CheckSUR log file found in C:\Windows\Logs\CBS which seemed to be related. In this case a .Net Framework update had failed to install a few times and this particular update was referenced in the log file:

Checking Windows Servicing Packages

Checking Package Manifests and Catalogs (f) CBS MUM Corrupt 0x00000000 servicing\Packages\Package_for_KB979916_RTM~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~6.1.1.0.mum  Expected file name Microsoft-Windows-Foundation-Package~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~6.1.7600.16385.mum does not match the actual file name

Checking Package Watchlist

Checking Component Watchlist

Checking Packages

Checking Component Store

Summary: Seconds executed: 485  Found 1 errors   CBS MUM Corrupt Total count: 1

Unavailable repair files:  servicing\packages\Package_for_KB979916_RTM~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~6.1.1.0.mum  servicing\packages\Package_for_KB979916_RTM~31bf3856ad364e35~amd64~~6.1.1.0.cat

To fix the problem I had to remove entries for the corrupt package from the registry (IMPORTANT: taking a backup first) from:

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Component Based Servicing\Packages

The specific entries are shown below. There are two, the highlighted entry, and the one beneath:

Deleting corrupt package entries from the registry

 

After deleting the two entries I reran Windows Update checking for updates and this package was redownloaded and then installed without issue. After this the service pack 1 installation proceeded without error. You may find that the specific update referenced in your CheckSUR log is different to the one mentioned here, but the method is the same.