Windows 10: Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions

Discus and support Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions in Windows 10 Installation and Upgrade to solve the problem; I tried to upgrade a laptop to Windows 10. The result of the upgrade is a PC with CPU usage constantly at 95% or more, so that it is unusable. The only... Discussion in 'Windows 10 Installation and Upgrade' started by billcz, Jul 24, 2016.

  1. billcz Win User

    Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions


    I tried to upgrade a laptop to Windows 10. The result of the upgrade is a PC with CPU usage constantly at 95% or more, so that it is unusable. The only tools I have found to work are Task Manager/Resource Monitor, and the Run item when you right click the Start Menu. I am asking for general help to solve my problem, but also specific help for these two questions which I am pursuing to solve my problem:

    • What services are dependent on WinHttpAutoProxySvc?
    • How can I get bcdedit to run in the command window? (I may need to switch to administrator within the command window.)
    Details: I have a Dell Latitude E5400 with Intel Core2 Duo T7250 @2Gz, 3 GB RAM, over 100 GB of available hard drive space, and Intel Integrated Graphics. It was running Windows 7 Pro SP1, 32 bit. I upgraded using the Get Windows 10 app that has been on my PC for months. The upgrade process was troublesome. On the first attempt, something went wrong and it said “Try Again”, which I did. For the second attempt, it took a very long time. After accepting the legal stuff, I had that circle with the percentage in it for about 12 hours before it finished. After that I had a screen with just a blue Windows 10 logo and spinning dots. This lasted for roughly 40 hours. After choosing custom settings, it went thru some screens and eventually went to a black screen with a small window saying “Personalized settings. Setting up personalized settings for Web Platform Customizations” . This was there for 6 days before I decided to force a power down.
    Since then I have forced a power cycle and rebooted many times. (Shutdown from the Start Menu never finishes.) Most reboots result in just a black screen (although I can see and move the cursor). About a quarter of the time, I get a normal looking Windows 10 desktop, with the same wallpaper slide show that I had on the Windows 7 install. However, most things do not work – try to start them and nothing happens. This includes MS WORD, File Explorer, left clicking on the Start Menu, etc. I can right click on the Start Menu, but Search, Command Prompt, Computer Management, etc. do not get any response. Only Run works. And only for the command prompt that I’ve seen so far. However, I can also do CTL-ALT-DLT and open Task Manager and then Resource Monitor. When I do this I see that WinHttpAutoProxySvc is taking 75-80% of CPU, and iphlpsvc is taking 17-20% of CPU. This is constant over many reboots over many days of runtime. So my CPU is constantly pegged at 95% or more. And from what I’ve discovered so far, the only tools at my disposal are Task Manager and the command prompt. I normally use a docking station, but I get the same behavior when the laptop is by itself with no wires whatsoever plugged into it.
    I tried to stop WinHttpAutoProxySvc in the Services tab of Task Mgr, but it says I can’t because other services depend on it. I checked the Internet including sites like Black Viper, but I can’t find anything specific to Windows 10, and they all say no dependencies. So this is my question 1) above. What services depend on this, so I can try to stop them?
    I also tried to stop iphlpsvc, but after 2 hours it was still “Stopping” and CPU usage had not gone down, so I gave up on that. I also tried selecting “Open Services” by right clicking on a service in the Task Mgr Services tab so I could disable services. This brings up a window, but it never paints the data, even after hours of wait.
    Another approach I have pursued is to try to boot into safe mode. Tapping F8 does not work for me. I’ve read that I must execute “bcdedit /set {default} bootmenupolicy legacy” to enable F8. When I try this, I get “Access is Denied”. I wonder if this is because I must be administrator. So this is my question 2) above – how can I switch to administrator within the command line interface? Remember, Right click – Search does not work for me.
    If anyone has any other suggestions, I would appreciate it. Thank you for your attention.

    :)
     
    billcz, Jul 24, 2016
    #1

  2. 'Forced' Microsoft 10 upgrade results in unusable computer

    So this week my wife's work computer, my personal work laptop, and my family desktop PC at home was pushed the Windows 10 upgrade. I am one where I want to be in complete control of what OS I have on my PC equipment. I also take into account the learning
    curve of a new OS. Yes I understand that it is ultimately inevitable that everything will be Windows 10 and you will eventually have to upgrade to it. However this upgrade has caused me nothing but problems and now 1 unusable system. My wife's laptop was
    the first asset to be 'violated'. She doesn't have the fastest laptop in the world so the upgrade literally took about 3 hours to complete. And oh by the way it happened right in the middle of her work day when she had a Powerpoint to finish. So she was
    up to 12:00 that night finishing it up. My second laptop got 'violated' the next day and thankfully it had no problems because it is a newer system. Our main family computer is a dell desktop that got 'violated' last night. After I turned on the monitor
    to use the computer it had the welcome to Windows 10 box displaying. I proceeded to finalize the setup and after many reboots I now understand that my video card has no Windows 10 driver. So I get the nice 640 resolution from the basic windows driver displayed.
    This desktop is a dell precision workstation with a NVIDIA Quadro FX card. So now because of the upgrade (that I didn't want) I cannot use my system. I need to spend money on a video card that is compatible with Windows 10. So I went from a very usable
    stable Windows 7 system to a system that does not work unless I want to spend more money. I don't know maybe I am old fashioned but I think this is a scam. I don't care if this is a free upgrade. I did't want the software in the first place and now I have
    an expensive boat anchor. And the worst part of it is now I have to tell my family they can't use the PC because Microsoft hosed us.

    I am just extremely aggravated because I knew if I would ever upgrade in the future that I would have to plan for it. And that would probably include upgrading some of my hardware. But the key is I could have prepared for it. Now I am stuck with a system
    that doesn't work and I have to spend time and money to get working. Time that I could be spending with my family.

    Very displeased MS customer
     
    AngryMSCustomer_660, Jul 24, 2016
    #2
  3. Greg Carmack - Windows MVP, Jul 24, 2016
    #3
  4. bobkn Win User

    Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions

    Here's a rather ignorant suggestion:

    If you can, clean install Win 10. That's likely to get rid of mysterious errors. As you have already installed 10 as an upgrade and activated it, a clean install will automatically activate online for the same hardware ("digital entitlement"). I know that you may not wish to do that if you have a lot of software that came with the laptop, for which you have no installation media.

    To run with admin privileges in command line, run cmd.exe as administrator. (Search for cmd. Right click the result, and choose "run as administrator".)

    Best of luck.
     
    bobkn, Jul 24, 2016
    #4
  5. simrick Win User
    Hi billcz and welcome to Tenforums.
    WOW! I must say, I've seen a lot of problems with W7 upgrades, but never like this.

    Here's some info on your #1. If you don't use a proxy to connect to the internet, then you don't need it running.
    WinHTTP AutoProxy Support (Windows)

    In Task Manager, select File>Run and type in msconfig.

    Go to the Boot tab, and select Safe boot, and tick the radio button for Network, then OK. This will get you into safe mode upon restart.

    Check for malware/hijackers/redirectors, etc.:
    Download ADWCleaner and run the scan, then clean. Post the log; it can be found at C:\AdwCleaner.

    Undo the safe boot using the same method as above.

    Go to Services tab. Check the box Hide all Microsoft services. Then uncheck everything else, so you can perform a clean boot. Reboot the machine. and see how it runs. If it's working better, start enabling the services a few at a time, to see what's causing the problem.
    Clean Boot - Perform in Windows 10 to Troubleshoot Software Conflicts - Windows 10 Forums

    .
     
    simrick, Jul 24, 2016
    #5
  6. NavyLCDR New Member
    I must be ignorant, because that is what I would do!
     
    NavyLCDR, Jul 24, 2016
    #6
  7. simrick Win User
    A clean install is probably best at this point, but we don't know for sure if the thing is activated. He can't get anything to work, so how can he check?
     
    simrick, Jul 24, 2016
    #7
  8. NavyLCDR New Member

    Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions

    @billcz , does Win + X work to bring up the start menu context menu?
     
    NavyLCDR, Jul 24, 2016
    #8
  9. DavidY Win User
    I know some Dell computers needed a BIOS update to work with Windows 8, and I guess the same applies for Windows 10.
    Might be worth doing/checking if you can get it going enough to load a BIOS update.
     
    DavidY, Jul 24, 2016
    #9
  10. billcz Win User
    Folks, thanks for your input.
    -- bobkn, I've had a clean install in the back of my mind - but that is a last resort.
    -- The frustrating thing is I can see what's wrong. Presumably if I can just manage to kill WinHttpAutoProxySvc, I'll be back in control. So I'd prefer to avoid the nuclear option. It is frustrating - why would MS allow a service to take 80% of the CPU in the first place?!!
    -- NavyLCDR, Win + X doesn't respond.
    -- I did discover tonight that flipping off the wireless switch makes things behave a little differently. Still bad, but different.
    -- I've been able to reach the BIOS menu, so I'll put DavidY's suggestion in my to-do list. I just can't see how that will affect the WinHttpAutoProxySvc problem, tho.
    -- I figured out how to open a command window as administrator - use runas. Unfortunately, I don't seem to know the admin password. However, the only reason to do that is to safe boot. Thanks to simrick's suggestion, I found out I can use Start->Run to call up msconfig. So I'll try it from there. However, I only want to safe boot so I can kill WinHttpAutoProxySvc. Maybe I can do that from msconfig!
    Anyways, that will probably have to wait for the weekend. I can't afford to keep spending this time during the week.
    Again, thanks for the suggestions.
     
    billcz, Jul 25, 2016
    #10
  11. simrick Win User
    I think, if we can get some control over the machine, we could try a repair install using an in-place upgrade first. But we first need control of the machine, and also make sure there is nothing "lurking" as well.

    Let us know how you manage at the weekend. If you can get through my suggestions with safe boot, and clean boot, that will determine next steps. *Smile

    EDIT: Please explain what you mean by not knowing the admin password - are you trying to do this from a non-administrative-level user account? If so, we have to stop and do something to get you into an administrative-level account.
     
    simrick, Jul 25, 2016
    #11
  12. billcz Win User
    Just a status report...
    I haven't been able to run msconfig lately. For a while, behaviour was very predictable, but this weekend that was not the case. Sometimes some things work. Sometimes other things. Sometimes nothing!
    However, I've discovered that with the wireless turned off I can predictably do Run --> "cmd". In the command line interface I've been copying my files to a thumb drive. That is slow but it is working! Of the programs on the computer, the only one I'm worried about is MS Office 2016 Pro Plus. Need to figure out how to copy that off or whatever needs to be done, after which a new install of Windows 10 would be an option. I have the activation key for Office, but the instructions say to uninstall the old copy first. Don't know if I'm going to be able to do that.
    This weekend, CPU usage is steady at 80%, but split between a few processes. I did manage to disable WinHttpAutoProxySvc and iphlpsvc, I think (haven't been able to verify). Also Diagnostic Tracking Service which was taking up CPU. One of the processes taking a steady 20% of CPU is explorer.exe. So my problem is not just WinHttpAutoProxySvc using too much CPU - other things seem to take up the slack when it is disabled. It seems I have a more subtle problem.
    BTW, I think Windows 10 is fully installed. At least, at the command prompt, "systeminfo" says the OS is Windows 10 installed back on 7/12. That was early on in my troubles.
    I'll tackle it some more next weekend...
     
    billcz, Jul 31, 2016
    #12
  13. simrick Win User

    Windows 10 Upgrade Failure Results in Unusable PC – Specific Questions

    That's somewhat good news. *Smile

    MSOffice should be linked to your MS account. If you log into
    My Account

    you can manage your install from there. You input your keycode, and it gets you to your product(s). You can either install live, or choose other/or offline installation, and get an ISO. You should be able to deactivate your current Office install from there.

    Download and install or reinstall Office 365, Office 2016, or Office 2013 on your PC - Microsoft Office

    Windows 10 should be activated then, which means you can clean install as often as you like/need, skipping when it asks for a code during install. I would also choose a custom install for W10 and nuke all partitions, so you are installing to an unallocated drive. That *should* make sure, if you had any infections, that they don't survive (of course, depends on the infection).

    Good luck! *Smile
     
    simrick, Jul 31, 2016
    #13
  14. billcz Win User
    Well, I'm ready to give up and download Windows 10 to a thumb drive and boot from that. I've managed to copy all my files off of the system.
    I don't have a Microsoft Account - I got my MS Office from a Home Use Program (HUP). But I found my product code.
    I disabled the services that were using all the CPU, and rebooted, and the CPU was still pegged, with a different set of apps and services. By pegged I mean 99% most of the time, with quick drops down to about 70% every 30 seconds or so. So then I disabled some of the new culprits, restarted, and the CPU was still at 99% in the same pattern, with new culprits. So there is something seriously wrong with the scheduler or whatever is responsible for CPU usage.
    I've changed TimeBroker in the registry from 3 to 4. That didn't help.
    I've managed to turn off most everything in Settings. That didn't help.
    In a safe mode start up, I did a full system scan with Norton Security. It only found 28 tracking cookies. But even in safe mode, things seemed flaky.
     
    billcz, Aug 5, 2016
    #14
  15. simrick Win User
    I see disk thrashing a lot with W7>W10 upgrades, and usually it's a result of driver issues, and OEM crapware. But one I just finished working on, was so bad - and it turned out to be a corrupted user account (as well as drivers). I suspect the original upgrade was done with the 3rd-party AV installed, which usually causes this.

    I will say though, I've not seen any problems with clean installs on W7 machines - that seems to fix it all. *Smile
     
    simrick, Aug 5, 2016
    #15
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