Consequences of turning off computer during Windows Vista update ("Do not turn off your computer")?

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Solution 1

Likely, the update it is currently on will fail, but you can continue using your computer like nothing happened - You may want to run chkdsk on your hard drive just to make sure there are no problems.

Worst-case usual scenario - It is in the middle of updating a system file / half way through the process and a restart means it is missing as it is does not exist at the moment. However, Windows Vista is quite good at repairing itself and may boot into the recovery mode and roll back the update for you, so you will be out of action for a short while (probably under 30 minutes)

Utter worst case unusual scenario, it is updating a boot file (but not sure how many updates do this) and restarting will give the message "Operating System Not Found" or similar. In which case you will need to put in the original disk and do a startup repair or at very worst case, a reinstall of Windows.

Solution 2

Worst Case: Your computer will no longer boot, and you will have to do a repair install from the OS disk. (Or, VERY unlikely, your disk will become slightly corrupted, so make sure to run a chkdisk /f after rebooting)

Best Case: Your computer will boot fine, and install the updates again perfectly.

edit: Just to be more specific, a repair install will not wipe any of your files or settings or programs away.

Solution 3

Is it a Vista machine?

Exact same thing happened to me, only my machine took it upon itself to turn off midway through, totally borked my OS, nothing would boot or update. I ended up running a linux live CD to backup a few files I wanted then reformatting the bugger!

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Larry O'Brien
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Larry O'Brien

Senior Content Developer for Azure Machine Learning Formerly: Xamarin, Gemini Observatory, Contributing Editor and Columnist, SD Times Editor of now-defunct magazines including Software Development, Computer Language, AI Expert, and Game Developer. Not a bad coder.

Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • Larry O'Brien
    Larry O'Brien almost 2 years

    My system has been stuck at "Configuring updates" for about an hour with the percentage stuck at 25%. If I do a hard reboot, what are the likely and worst-case consequences?

  • Dark Templar
    Dark Templar over 12 years
    how do you run 'chkdsk'?
  • Dark Templar
    Dark Templar over 12 years
    What will a repair install actually do?
  • William Hilsum
    William Hilsum over 12 years
    @DarkTemplar Go to Command Prompt and then type chkdsk when you are on the drive you want to check. To change drive, type <drive letter>: for example, to get to the C drive, I would type c:. If you can't find Command Prompt, go to run and type CMD.
  • UNK
    UNK over 12 years
    @DarkTemplar; afaik, it simply reinstalls the operating system over your existing copy. Often won't do much good, but in this particular case where the main danger would be from corrupted OS files, it's in its element.
  • fixer1234
    fixer1234 about 6 years
    Welcome to Super User. Your story made me laugh, it made me cry; it was a roller coaster of excitement. But it didn't resemble a solution to the problem until the very end, and then it was light on the how-to details. Can you revise it to get right to the solution, and provide more detail? Thanks.