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Messages - TiredOfWindows

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Well; the Exiftool problem came back -- cause unknown. I suspect that it was a Windows Update that did the damage; I'm sure it wasn't Windows Repair.  Anyway, I ran v 3.1.0 Windows Repair (just the first three repairs: 01-Reset Registry Permissions, 02-Reset File Permissions (on the C: drive only), 03-Reset Service Permissions) and then rebooted -- and presto! The problem was gone.

Thanks very much, Shane; you're The Man!

I'll put up a separate post about a timeout problem that has been screwing up my SSL for years, in case you have any insights.
 
Martin

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Sorry about the slow response; I had a deadline I needed to meet.

My username contains only alpha characters with a space between my first and last names.

Martin

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Let me preface this by saying that I've used Windows Repair several times, and overall I think that both its author and the program walk on water, so to speak!   :-)

But I've just discovered (and finally fixed) a major problem (major for me, at least) that the Reset File Permissions "repair" actually CAUSED!

I use a lot of photo software, and some of it (including Adobe Elements, apparently) calls upon a program called exiftool.exe.  I discovered (after I had used Reset File Permissions--but I didn't make that connection immediately) that exiftool was refusing to execute. After much exploration and experimenting, I discovered that SEVERAL subfolders (most obviously one in C:\Users\<username>\Appdata\Local\) had now become recursive; in other words, the top-level \Application Data\ subfolder created by exiftool now contained a pointer to an imaginary subfolder-copy of itself, and that imaginary subfolder-copy contained a pointer to another imaginary subfolder-copy of itself, and so on. The recursion continues until the subfolder path ( .... \Appdata\Local\Application Data\Application Data\Application Data\ ....) becomes so long that Windows 7 barfs... And the consequence is that exiftool won't run.

I won't attempt to explain the problem further; instead I recommend that you read this thread, which explains it much better than I can:

http://www.sevenforums.com/general-discussion/115149-stop-application-data-folder-replicating.html

I recommend you DO NOT waste time and maybe cause other damage by attempting to delete the imaginary sub-folders! I found that it can be done, but the recursion will simply be recreated!

Instead; as the thread suggests:  download and then execute a (free) program called JunctionBox, from  http://sourceforge.net/projects/junctionbox/ (and then reboot, of course).  It worked for me first time. The user interface is simple and I used the default settings. I have 64-bit Windows 7, but other users say that it works with 32-bit Windows also.

It will be a cold day in you-know-where before I mess around with my permissions again! and I question whether it's a good idea to offer this as a "repair" option.....

I hope this helps someone!

Best wishes to all,

Martin

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Tweaking.com Support & Help / Re: Beta Repair System Restore
« on: October 07, 2013, 11:55:06 pm »
Hi Shane,

Thanks for the feedback! The single 4K bad sector has shown up repeatedly on CHKDSK runs, ever since I lost power during a thunderstorm several weeks ago.  It's the only bad sector on a 1 terabyte drive, so I don't worry about it.  Presumably it got corrupted.  Someday I'll try to fix it; right now I don't know of any utility s/w that can do that.

I didn't get any messages from Windows Defender when I ran your Windows Repair, so presumably there was no conflict there.

My latest problem is that all the Restore Points except the two System Image Restore Points disappeared (again) after I used 64-bit CCleaner; I was allowed to create a new one, however. So CCleaner is my prime suspect right now.  No, I didn't try using it to weed out "old" Restore Points; if it erased them it did so entirely on its own initiative.  I see web postings that indicate lots of other folks have been having the same problem; meanwhile the author(s) deny that it's possible. Yeah, right, sure!

ToW

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Tweaking.com Support & Help / Re: Beta Repair System Restore -- SUCCESS!!
« on: October 05, 2013, 11:22:49 pm »
All the trouble on my 64-bit Windows 7 machine began right after I installed Microsoft's EMET patch and then uninstalled it a day later because it slowed the computer down to a crawl.... (but strangely, EMET on the XP virtual machine doesn't seem to impact it at all.....)

The first problem I noticed (a week or so ago) was IE9 was now working very erratically - sometimes it would connect to old IE Favorites OK and other times it would just sit there spinning its wheels.  But then I found that System Restore was completely dead, which I mistakenly thought was a side effect of my next discovery; ALL my Restore points had been wiped out!! There was nothing listed there at all! - and I wasn't allowed to create any new ones.... But I did notice that my playing around with System Restore resulted in 24 copies of rstrui.exe all running simultaneously.

I did a Microsoft Windows Repair at bootup, and that allowed me to create some new Restore Points, at least.  And resetting IE9 to its default settings appeared to make it connect to a variety of sites more reliably (or did I imagine that?) - but still not as smoothly as it used to.

Then today: FreeFileSynch hung up completely while I was copying from one drive to another; it simply stopped. I discovered that I couldn't shut down the hung-up FreeFileSynch by using the Task Manager, but Process Explorer was able to shut it down (after a delay).

Then I discovered that now I could list a few recent Restore Points (although some less recent ones had disappeared - again) and I could still create new Restore Points (so I increased the disk space allocated to saving Restore Points, in case that was playing a part in all this). But System Restore still refused to run (nothing would appear to happen when I clicked on it) - and then I found (using the Task Manager) that yet again I had multiple instances of rstrui.exe running simultaneously (8 or 9).  So I closed all those down (using Process Explorer again) and rebooted and then ran Tweaking.com - Windows Repair (All in One) (v 1.9.18) for the very first time.

It ran MalwareBytes (which I aborted before it finished, because it was finding nothing, and I do frequent virus checks anyway); then CHKDSK (which reported some (unspecified!) errors - or was that just the persistent bad sector?); and then Microsoft's System File Checker which found numerous errors, including some (unspecified!) files that it said it could not fix....?

Then Tweaking.com - Windows Repair tried to repair the computer and I ran the beta System Restore Repair at the end, and rebooted.

Success!  Now some long-gone Restore Points have reappeared! And now System Restore offers to apply them:



And somehow Tweaking.com - Windows Repair restored the two long-gone System Image restore points at the bottom of the list!

Questions:

Does Windows Defender inhibit Tweaking.com - Windows Repair? Because I forgot to disable it, and of all the logs in C:\Program Files (x86)\Tweaking.com\Windows Repair (All in One), only two (windows_repair_hkey_local_machine_3_log.txt and windows_repair_hkey_local_machine_4_log.txt) seem to contain any information about what Tweaking.com - Windows Repair actually achieved. There were several warnings about "registry key is skipped (contains wildcard)" and "C:\System Volume Information\{long string1}{long string2} - CreateFile Error : 5 Access is denied" but almost the all the log files are completely empty, and the remainder don't say what Tweaking.com - Windows Repair actually succeeded in doing.

But something must worked in all of that, because System Restore now appears to be operational again!!!

And Question 2:

I finally pinned down the new (deviant) behavior of IE9 while I was fiddling with all this: it won't connect to any https site (such as https://www.google.com/) if I'm in any tab other than the very first one that IE9 opens up...  Does anyone know how to fix this annoyance?

ToM

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