Show-InstallationPrompt -Message "The Microsoft Office cleanup process will complete shortly.
Here’s the code I’m using for that (everything is the default language from the script template except for the Show-InstallationPrompt line): # Display a message at the end of the install For the logged-in users, I’d like to display a notification at the end of the script that says something like “Hey, the install is finished, so you can go ahead and start using your Office applications again”. We’re going to run this both when users are and are not logged in. Everything works great with the exception of my last step. I’m to the point where I’ve tested the script by installing it manually and via SCCM. The OS we’re running is Windows 7 64-bit.
I also have more than 30 GB available and will attempt Resetting Windows Update + Running Windows Update Troubleshooter if the 1809 repair fails.I’m using the PowerShell Toolkit to clean up the Microsoft Office environment on some computers (remove old versions of Office, upgrade to Office 365, etc.). I am also using a 500 GB NVMe SSD and I've updated my profile to reflect that if the previous program is not doing the proper checks I'll give Crystal Diskinfo a try and upload that data.
I tried searching which specific one I needed through the Windows ISO Downloader, but I could not determine which was my current build, so I downloaded the most recent 1809 iso. will attempt doing the 1809 in place upgrade repair. You say SFC /SCANNOW from an admin command or Powershell prompt reports Have you tried downloading the iso file and upgrading using that and NOT accepting updates as part of the procedure?īe warned: attempts to resolve upgrade failures have run for days and weeks, sometimes in excess of 100 posts- often without resolution. doesn't list 0x8007003 but note the section on preparation.Īnd run the windows Update Troubleshooter. HD Tune free version is old and may not read some later SSDs. Smart parameters: - are you using a SSD? (Don't think that's stated in your specs). The starting point is to get SFC /SCANNOW to pass.
Windows 10 Recovery Tools - Bootable Rescue Disk iso files are freely downloadable using e.g. This suggests you should perform an in-place upgrade repair of your 1809 installation using an 1809 iso file. Windows Resource Protection could not perform the requested operation. Windows has scanned the file system and found no problems.ġ21939199 total allocation units on disk.ġ6455344 allocation units available on disk.
Security descriptor verification completed. Ġ unindexed files recovered to lost and found. Stage 1: Examining basic file system structure. I'm currently at a loss and am hoping that someone can help guide me to update. I've lastly also tried doing a Clean Boot, which simply didn't work. However, whenever I restarted after it was finished running in Command Prompt, it booted on a black screen and hung there until I forced shutdown holding the power button. I have also tried using the "chkdsk" command in Command Prompt. I have tried the method in this post on Reddit, specifically downloading a "Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit" to replace the one I currently have because this person said "we need to properly get the installer the recognize `wimmount.sys` located somewhere", however no matter if I try to reuinstall, uninstall, or repair my current or different ADK, I always get an, "Invalid Drive: F:" error. Operation Name: Mount WIM file C:\$WINDOWS.~BT\Sources\SafeOS\winre.wim, index 1 to C:\$WINDOWS.~BT\Sources\SafeOS\SafeOS.Mount HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\WimMount\ImagePath should be pointed to system32\drivers\wimmount.sys. If DriverPath is not system32\drivers\wimount.sys, that is likely the issue. Last Operation: Mount WIM file C:\$WINDOWS.~BT\Sources\SafeOS\winre.wim, index 1 to C:\$WINDOWS.~BT\Sources\SafeOS\SafeOS.MountĭriverPath: F:\ADK Temp\Assessment and Deployment Kit\Deployment Tools\amd64\DISM\wimmount.sys ReportId = 20C86252-EA52-437B-AE96-BF79CDA4A639Įrror: SetupDiag reports failure determining wimmount.sys file version.