Run sfc /scannow in XP?

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  1. Posts : 632
    windows 7 x64 Home Premium
       #1

    Run sfc /scannow in XP?


    My mom's computer is acting up again, and I have been selected as the designated Repair Guy. Yay me!

    She is running XP sp3. I'd like to do an sfc/ scannow on the thing, but I've never done it in XP. Has anybody done this? What should I know going in? Any pointers or advice for me? Thanks!
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  2. Posts : 3,187
    Main - Windows 7 Pro SP1 64-Bit; 2nd - Windows Server 2008 R2
       #2

    It works exactly the same way. Go for it. :)

    You'll probably get even more help if you describe her computers symptoms in a little more detail.
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  3. Posts : 632
    windows 7 x64 Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thanks for the reply, profdlp.

    It is the same as Vista or Seven? Hmmm, I was told XP needed the installation discs in order to run sfc.
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  4. Posts : 774
    Vista Ultimate X64/ Windows 7 Dual-boot
       #4

    That's correct...
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  5. Posts : 6,349
    Windows7 Pro 64bit SP-1; Windows XP Pro 32bit
       #5

    Yep you need a disk.
    The files needed to compare are on the disk where Vista and 7 have a copy on the HD when installed.

    The file needed is i386.
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  6. Posts : 632
    windows 7 x64 Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #6

    Ah, the plot thickens...

    Her installation discs, if she can find them, will be plain-old XP... but her PC now has sp3 installed. Will that make a difference? Should I download XP and sp3, slipstream them, and use that?
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  7. Posts : 3,187
    Main - Windows 7 Pro SP1 64-Bit; 2nd - Windows Server 2008 R2
       #7

    Windows should have a stash of backups in C:WINDOWS\System32\Dllcache. SFC actually checks several locations and should only prompt you for the CD if it can't find a backup anywhere else. I used to copy the i386 folder to my hard drive whenever I did a new installation, then edit the registry so it was considered the "source", assuming SFC couldn't find the file it needed elsewhere.

    Microsoft set it up this way since they wouldn't want to eliminate everyone's ability to do a SFC as soon as they released a SP.
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  8. Posts : 632
    windows 7 x64 Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #8

    profdlp said:
    Windows should have a stash of backups in C:WINDOWS\System32\Dllcache. SFC actually checks several locations and should only prompt you for the CD if it can't find a backup anywhere else. I used to copy the i386 folder to my hard drive whenever I did a new installation, then edit the registry so it was considered the "source", assuming SFC couldn't find the file it needed elsewhere.

    Microsoft set it up this way since they wouldn't want to eliminate everyone's ability to do a SFC as soon as they released a SP.
    That's good to know. I'll set her up like that so in the future I can run sfc thru TeamViewer.

    Thanks everybody! I hope I can get her machine back up to par... I just wish I had more info than "it's running kinda slow" and "it's acting funny". Who knows what I'll find once I get there.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 3,187
    Main - Windows 7 Pro SP1 64-Bit; 2nd - Windows Server 2008 R2
       #9

    stevieray said:
    ...I just wish I had more info than "it's running kinda slow" and "it's acting funny"...
    That actually describes me these days, as well.

    I usually start diagnosing a "slow and funny" computer by checking running processes and startup items for obviously rotten stuff that shouldn't be there. If nothing raises a red flag I'll check the hard drive, both to see if it's full and/or on the way out. A memory test is another good one. If all those things look good then it's time for a thorough antivirus and antispyware scan.

    Good luck! :)
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  10. Posts : 632
    windows 7 x64 Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #10

    The good news is her PC is running pretty good now... no infections found, just a pigpile of factory installed bloatware (all of it in startup for no good reason). I uninstalled about 20 programs, took another 10 out of the startup folder, and now it takes less than two minutes to go from log on to system idle housekeeping done.

    The bad news is I couldn't get sfc to complete. It asked for the original disk, which we couldn't find (and Gateway might not even have given it to her when she bought the thing back in 2002). I tried an XP sp3 installation disc I had, but it was rejected. Found the i386 folder on her system at C:\I386, changed the SourcePath from D:\ to C:\, but it still kept asking for the disk. A corrupted i386 folder perhaps? I dunno...

    I'll head back down there next weekend and try again.
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