TrustedInstaller.exe is eating all CPU; 100%

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Solution 1

It often happens that TrustedInstaller takes 100% CPU as it's continuously working on updates. I usually leave it running for some hours (more than 10) with Internet connection enabled. After that, I try to reboot up to twice. The problem should not occur any more.

As yours is a new laptop, I would always suggest a Windows clean install by a clean retail version, not the vendor-customized ones with lots of garbage software shipped with it. A warez version, believe me, is ok because you have a Windows license when you have bought your laptop. Be sure that you install the version you are legitimated to use, and not the Ultimate because that will be bad.

Solution 2

Trusted installer is used by Windows Update to install updates. if you go to the control panel, and back to windows update, are you still installing updates in the background?

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Kaveh Shahbazian
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Kaveh Shahbazian

Programming, FunctionalProgramming, Learning continuously about Clean Code, Teamwork, TDD, DDD/IDD, and Technical Debt

Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • Kaveh Shahbazian
    Kaveh Shahbazian almost 2 years

    I have bought an ASUS ux50v for my wife (so pleeeeeaaaase help!), it has a single core cpu and Windows 7 Home Premium installed. I have updated it's os (made a mistake?) and now this TrustedInstaller.exe thing (used by Windows Module Installer or something like that; related to windows update) is screwing the whole system without logging/prompting/announcing what the heck it is up to.

    Anyone had the same problem and solved it?

    Edit 1: In action center>problem report I'v found a lot of repeated windowswcpotherfailure3. What's that?

    Edit 2: I ran sfc.exe /scannow and it says: Windows Resource Protection could not perform the requested operation.

    Edit 3: I restored Windows 7 to an earlier restore point and the problems gone (or maybe I would do a factory restore by DVDs); but I did not figured out what was the cause.

    And I am afraid of trying again to update Windows 7!

    Edit 4: I have found a blog entry that describes a similar problem. The error message (for WindowsWcpOtherFailure3...) is the same; but my default language is English on this laptop. Why should I get that problem?

    Edit 5: I gave up; restored to factory setting with recovery DVDs; turned off Windows Updates :(

    • kagali-san
      kagali-san over 13 years
      Wife mode: swap enabled, PowerStrip/other software cleanses fragmented RAM, sets low priority to unwanted processes, etc etc etc.
    • Kaveh Shahbazian
      Kaveh Shahbazian over 13 years
      You are so funny; you know!
    • Kaveh Shahbazian
      Kaveh Shahbazian almost 6 years
      Just for the record all problems from back then, solved by installing Ubuntu.
  • Kaveh Shahbazian
    Kaveh Shahbazian over 13 years
    Yes; it's still working :(
  • Kaveh Shahbazian
    Kaveh Shahbazian over 13 years
    Thanks!Where can I find a secure, not altered one?
  • usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ
    usr-local-ΕΨΗΕΛΩΝ over 13 years
    Sorry, I can't tell you. There is a thin red line dividing what's legal from what's illegal. I can't go beyond that line. No one here can. You have to search by yourself, without any help. :(
  • Kaveh Shahbazian
    Kaveh Shahbazian over 13 years
    I did not knew the meaning of warez! 8) You are right. For now; I just struggle with it. After all there must be a solution; "I have paid for it"! Thanks again!
  • Austin ''Danger'' Powers
    Austin ''Danger'' Powers about 11 years
    No need to talk about "warez". He can download Windows 7 from Digital River legitimately. Totally unnecessary to go looking for torrents for something you can easily get here: mydigitallife.info/…
  • Alexander
    Alexander over 8 years
    What's bad, Microsoft told me that built-in version of Windows (full of bloatware) is not the (legally) same as retail Windows from OEM disk. That is, I only have a right to install built-in version, and even if I wiped partition that consisted that bloatwared version I have no way of intalling it but to contact my notebook vendor and pay for giving me that 'their' version. Can't say I agree with that approach. What I'd like to get along with my notebook is Windows OEM disk AND another disk with drivers (separated one by one, not huge archive of all drivers and bloatware together).