When is it safe to let Revo Uninstaller cleanup leftovers?

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Solution 1

When is it safe to trust Revo Uninstaller?

My answer would be never.

Never trust an automated application to safely clean a windows registry, always always always back it up first.

You should check out this artcile on registry cleaners that points out that removing orphaned registry entries does not actually offer any performance gains, so why bother doing it.

I suspect in 99% of cases it would be fine. Office and VS probably share some basic informational or settings keys because they are both from MS, so that's probably where Revo got confused. My guess is that in this case you probably would have been fine to just carry on with the removed keys and it wouldn't cause any significant problems beyond just requireing you to reset some settings, but always make a backup and hang on to it until you can be certain your system is working fine.

Solution 2

i always let revo clean the registry and have never had an issue, even with large (>10000) registry entry items....

Solution 3

It's always safe, that's why there is an option that says "back up", and yes of course many of the keys do say Microsoft, because programs are so obnoxious that they put things there and leave them there.

Solution 4

Don't ever let Revo Uninstaller delete related files/registries before checking them first.

I didn't bother to check and just pressed the delete button. When the pop up showed it's deleting some of my Microsoft Office documents I quickly cancelled it. Gladly I could still recover them using Pandora recovery tool.

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Babu Bujji
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Babu Bujji

• Software designer/architect, application/website developer, author, educator--see full brand page. • Broad exposure to diverse firms from R&D at a Fortune 500 firm to principal software designer at a tiny startup company. • Worked on projects including: wep apps, content management systems, laser control, multi-user systems, database tools, color laser printer firmware. • Over 100 articles published on Simple-Talk.com and DevX.com covering topics (TDD, code review, source control, documentation, debugging, code smells, usability, visualization, testing) and technologies (C#, PowerShell, .NET, LINQ, JavaScript, AngularJs, XML, WPF, WinForms, database) -see full article list. • Open-source endeavors:   (1) SqlDiffFramework, a database comparison tool for comparing heterogeneous data sources.   (2) DocTreeGenerator, combines help pages of your PS cmdlets into a tree-structured HTML web site.   (3) MonitorFactory, a PowerShell framework to generate near-real-time monitors for any data resources.   (4) XmlDoc2CmdletDoc, generates individual help pages for binary PowerShell cmdlets.   (5) collection of developer tools/libraries in several languages (see API bookshelf); • Taught at community colleges and at University of Phoenix. • Member LinkedIn ( http://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelsorens )

Updated on September 17, 2022

Comments

  • Babu Bujji
    Babu Bujji almost 2 years

    I have been a user of Revo Uninstaller (free) for sometime and find it does a very good cleanup job with typical applications. Today I wanted to clean up my machine a bit more so I proceeded to remove Visual Studio 2005 with Revo Uninstaller. The VS installer removed the app with no issues, then Revo reported about 20,000 leftover registry keys. I am used to basically just see Arpcache and Muicache... since I am not a registry expert I had no clue about most of the 20,000 listed.

    So I backed up the registry then let Revo remove the 20,000. It next reported about 1500 leftover files which included my Microsoft Office applications(!) that I knew it should not be touching. So I did not delete any files with Revo. Suspecting that some of the removed keys were also Office-related, I tried to open Word and Excel, both of which knew something was up, as the installer kicked in (albeit just briefly) for each of them. At this point, since I knew there were issues, I just restored the registry and I am now (seemingly) running OK.

    My question, then: When is it safe to trust Revo Uninstaller?

    As a seasoned software professional, my own answer to this would be the obvious "When the keys it reports are something you understand and know are safe to delete" but then that makes Revo of little use except to registry experts, does it not...?