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Hi everyone, I've recently tried installing Vista on my machine at home which has been running XP completely fine for a few months. If I boot off the Vista DVD the above BSOD appears just after the Vista setup starts.
I have the following hardware:
MSI K9NGM-L nForce 410 Socket AM2 SATA onboard VGA 8 channel audio mATX AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ Socket AM2 Dual Core (2.2GHz) 512kb L2 Cache AM2 Retail Boxed Processor 1GB KIT (2X512MB) DDR2 800MHz
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Whoops, posted a bit soon. :)
Has anyone else seen these errors when installing Vista? I did run the Advisor before installing but the only item it picked up was MSN Messenger version being incompatible.
Any assistance would be greatly appreciated.
Cheeers Chris
"valleydoofer" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Hi everyone, I've recently tried installing Vista on my machine at home which > has been running XP completely fine for a few months. If I boot off the > Vista DVD the above BSOD appears just after the Vista setup starts. > > I have the following hardware: > > MSI K9NGM-L nForce 410 Socket AM2 SATA onboard VGA 8 channel audio mATX > AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+ Socket AM2 Dual Core (2.2GHz) 512kb L2 Cache AM2 > Retail Boxed Processor > 1GB KIT (2X512MB) DDR2 800MHz >
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I don't recognise this as a "well-known" problem during Vista setup, but ... 0xC000021A means STATUS_SYSTEM_PROCESS_TERMINATED: http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms854951.aspx .... indicating that something has caused Winlogon or CSRSS to terminate. These are the core user-mode proceses of Windows. There was one issue which could cause this, first noted back in NT 4.0 days: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/158376 and I believe the same problem, or a similar problem, could continue to exist in Vista.
I guess you're doing an Upgrade of your XP system,, to Vista? One possible workaround would be to do a clean install: - back up all your user data to a safe location; - run Vista Setup and elect to do a clean new Install, not an Upgrade to XP - elect to reformat your C: drive - proceed with Vista setup. - when setup is complete, restore your backed-up user data into your new Vista user directory. - re-install any applications you had running under XP.
Vista will now be installing onto your machine as onto teh bare metal hardware, without any interference from the previous XP installation. This will remove many possible causes of the 0xC000021A error. If you still get the error after that, you'll at least know there is a very fundamantal hardware problem. Obviously re-installing your apps etc is a bit of a hassle but it may be much quicker than trying to debug the error you're getting while upgrading.
Other folks may have extra/better ideas .... hope this helps a bit.
Andrew
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Thanks for you reply Andrew. I wiped my machine last night and tried the install again but unfortunately got the same issue. After you press any key to boot from the DVD then get the green scrolling bar for the start of setup that is right were it crashes. The strange thing is my motherboard, RAM and CPU are all pretty much brand new, I bought them all three months ago in anticipation of Vista's release.
I did run a chkdsk before installing Vista aswell and no errors were reported.
Makes me wonder if it could potentially be bad media. I did download it from Technet so maybe the ISO could have been corrupted during download or through the burning process?
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"valleydoofer" <valleydoofer[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote ...
[Quoted Text] > install again but unfortunately got the same issue. After you press any > key > to boot from the DVD then get the green scrolling bar for the start of > setup > that is right were it crashes.
Bugger! Oh well, it was worth a shot ...
The fact setup still crashes, is interesting diagnostic info in its own right.
> The strange thing is my motherboard, RAM and > CPU are all pretty much brand new, I bought them all three months ago in > anticipation of Vista's release.
In my experience, major hardware problems or incompatibilities will show up right away; they're not so much a function of the age of the hardware (you know how MTTF is high right at the beginning, goes really low for most of the lifecycle, then climbs sharply at the end of the lifecycle?)
> I did run a chkdsk before installing Vista aswell and no errors were > reported. > Makes me wonder if it could potentially be bad media. I did download it > from Technet so maybe the ISO could have been corrupted during download or > through the burning process?
Yes, that is very possible. I had a bad DVD which I'd downloaded from MSDN, turned out to be a flaky burn (grrr, death to Nero). I don't remember the exact error, but I lost a night chasing it. I've heard of other folks having weird errors with burnt install media, too.
As Vista setup runs, it logs information to a file called setupact.log. This is a plain text file which can be opened with Notepad, etc. During the early stages of setup, this file is kept in the directory $Windows.~BT\Sources\Panther, on the C: drive (ie, C:\$Windows.~BT\Sources\Panther\Setupact.log). After Setup reaches its later stages, the file is moved to %WINDIR%\panther. This is where you will find it, if/when your Vista setup ever completes successfully. To find out why your setup crashes, you can try to inspect this file from a Command Prompt:
- After setup crashes, reboot the machine from the Vista DVD. - Choose the option to repair the machine, rather than going to Vista Setup. - Under the Repair options, open a Command Prompt. - type "notepad C:\$Windows.~BT\Sources\Panther\Setupact.log" - Scroll to the bottom of the Setupact.log file to see what Setup's last operations were, before it stopped doing its thing.
The error messages you find here may hopefully give you a clue about what is failing; or at least what happened immediately prior to the failure (some temporal association to causality?).
If Vista crashes even just going to a command prompt, then there's a very fundamental problem. If that case, I'd suggest burning a new DVD from the ISO image, taking all the precautions you can for a successful burn (eg burn at slow speed, quiesce any other applications, select the "verify" option if your burning app has one, etc etc). Then try Vista setup again.
Let us know how you get on.
Andrew
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Hey Andrew, just though I'd let you know I tried re-downloading the ISO and burned a new DVD with verification but still got the same error at exactly the same time.
So, went back to installing XP, suprise, suprise it installed first time without any issues at all. (Grrr!!! I'm immediately not liking Vista!)
Thanks for all your help and advice Andrew.
Cheers Chris
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"valleydoofer" <valleydoofer[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote ...
[Quoted Text] > Hey Andrew, just though I'd let you know I tried re-downloading the ISO > and > burned a new DVD with verification but still got the same error at exactly > the same time.
Hey Chris,
Arrgh, bugger. Okay well that's a real shame. Afraid I'm a bit stuck for ideas so, yeah, you might be looking at running XP for a while yet. Maybe try running the Upgrade Advisor and see what it reports??
Sorry I couldn't help fix it.
-- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au
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