Explorer.exe server execution failed

Problem Solved

Many thanks to Gigaherz and Google as it found his following post on this forum for 9-17-09. I made the suggested change to the first location. My drive had somehow changed from "C" to "T", which is my thumb drive. The second change to the second location mentioned below wouldn't be accepted. After a restart all seems to be functioning normally, with Wind Exp and the shortcuts to Control Panel, Computer, etc fully functional. Thanks to each of that read my post and gave it your attention.

Hello people,

I just today had this same problem in my Windows 7 profile.
The solution is to go to regedit, and change 2 keys to point to valid places:
Code:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\User Shell Folders\Personal
and
Code:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell  Folders\Personal
You can set back the defaults by looking at how the other entries in those keys look like.

I'm not enterely sure if the second one is necessary, but I changed both to point to valid places and it works now.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP d4996t
OS
Windows 8 Pro
CPU
Intel Core 2 quad Q6600 2.4Ghz
Motherboard
Asustek
Memory
4 Ghz
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GeForce 8400GS
Sound Card
Soundblaster X-Fi Extreme Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Hyundai 22" widescreen
Hard Drives
400 GB 279 G free
FYI reg fix worked for me. Similarly I had my "Documents" pointed to a USB drive that didnt mount as its normal letter today.

Had been in the process of changing my external drives (I use a lot of them) to use folder mount points in addition to letter, which really is the best solution for this problem long term. For example I am going to have

C:\.res\mounts\
C:\.res\mounts\drive1\
C:\.res\mounts\drive2\
C:\.res\mounts\drive3\
Etc

Then "Documents" and "Personal" wont be pointed to a letter, they will point to
C:\.res\mounts\drive1\

Thus even if the drive isnt plugged in, it will still find that directory, it will just be empty. As soon as the drive is plugged in, it wont matter what letter it gets, because it will also mount to
C:\.res\mounts\drive1\ everytime.

mountvol.exe and linkd.exe are your friends. While *nix still confuses me with /mnt/sda1/ and such, MS needs to get with the program of mounting to a universal resource location, in addition to drive letter. I have so many needs for portable use that if I could rely on a consistent mount point from computer to computer based on the drive ID or similar, live would be so much easier. Right now I have to build scripts that look for a volume label, store the drive letter as a variable, then do what I need to do with the variable. Its not consistent and doesnt always work. Being able to map physical drives similar to UNC paths is greatly needed - not just folder mounts, but a consistent way to access a drive based on its mount ID, serial, or something unique to the drive that any windows pc will recognize. Ive even seen instances of different machines giving different mount GUIDS to the same drive, which shouldnt happen.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
W7-32 Ultimate / W7-64 Ultimate No Workey....
CPU
Intel i7
Motherboard
MSI X58 Pro
Memory
12GB
Graphics Card(s)
Cheapo NVidia Chipset
Sound Card
On Board
Monitor(s) Displays
Dual 22" Widescreen
Screen Resolution
Max
Hard Drives
Internal SATA 2TB
External Segate GoFlex 1TB
External Segate 500GB (Netdisk USB/ESATA enclosure)
External Maxtor 150GB BlackArmour
IronKey S200 Secure Flash Drive (2GB)
IronKey M400 Secure Flash Drive (4GB)
IronKey Trusted Access Banking Flash
PSU
Cheapo
Case
Cheapo
Cooling
6" Side Case Fan
Keyboard
Whatever is laying around
Mouse
Whatever
Internet Speed
Cable
The registry fix fixed my sis comp! Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit Dell Inspiron.

Thanks!!
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit
Simply click start or the windows logo then right click on Documents then properties then click restore defaults. Hope it works.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 32bit
What do you do it none of the previous fixes does anything to help the situation?
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Enterprise X64 x86(work) / Windows 7 Ultimate x86 (home)
you get a mac :shock:

j/k

I have been having issues with explorer "winking" out on me - I have a ton of explorer files from making edits and what not. I do have the "restart explorer" option in my context menu which helps...

But I am curious as to why explorer winks out - usually occurs when copying/pasting or deleting files/icons off the desktop. I can see it being a concern.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7
But I am curious as to why explorer winks out - usually occurs when copying/pasting or deleting files/icons off the desktop. I can see it being a concern.
It could be totally unrelated, but most of the times I have had explorer crash/freeze/vanish it was because of unstable shell extensions (those explorer "plugins" that add varied things, from context menu items to thumbnail support or even virtual folders).
I suppose there shoudl be some applications around to let you enable/disable shell extensions so you can check if there's soemthing causing your issues.

EDIT: A quick brought up this app in the first result:
http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/shexview.html
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Professional
what doesnt make sense to me is that i can change whatever i want to change when logged in as the admin. i cant change jack when i am logged into my account, which is also an admin account. this only seems to be acting this way when i am using a x64 version of 7. when i am on an x86 version, i have god access. it makes my brain hurt especially since there is no reason whatsoever as to why it is acting in such a way.

I WISH WE COULD USE MACs, but unfortunately we dont get that choice at work.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Enterprise X64 x86(work) / Windows 7 Ultimate x86 (home)
Revived Thread

I keep the My Documents folder on an external drive. When I reattached it, the error went away.
If you've recently changed hardware, settings, or unplugged a drive, it may help to temporarily undo that change until you configure your system to live without it.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Professional 6.1.7601 SP1 Build 7601
Thanks for this thread!
I had installed an extra drive and wanted to plug in an external drive to copy some files to a thumb drive, and the "my computer" icon on the desktop would not want to open anymore.

Standard I have a 128GB SSD, and 1TB HD installed, but this time I added 2x 1TB drives, one external via USB, the other internal via SATA, and a 8GB microSD Card, and that seemed enough to make me lose two freakin hours of my time trying to figure out what the problem is. My AV scanner found no virusses, so I thought it it must have been a win bug!

Regedit did not solve my problem, but like one user said, just change admin privileges.
The problem is I could not open control panel, and neither user accounts.
I had to change from admin to standard user by selecting searching for 'user' in the taskbar and selecting 'create or remove user accounts' because the standard icon 'User Accounts' did not work!

Changing from admin to standard back to admin solved my probs! Thanks guys!
 

My Computer

OS
7 home, 64 bit
CPU
Core i5 2500k
Motherboard
MSI
Memory
2x4GB GSkill 1333Mhz
Graphics Card(s)
AMD Radeon HD 6850
Sound Card
Internal
Monitor(s) Displays
1080p Samsung LED
Hard Drives
1TB Seagate
1TB WD (CRAP DRIVE)
128GB Intel 510 SSD
PSU
650W Antec
Cooling
Stock
If you have the same problem listed in this thread, and there is no problem with your shell folders and mapped folders, there is another option that worked for me. I always check the box in FOLDER OPTIONS to always open folders in a separate process, but for some reason, this can be a problem if you get the server Execution Failed error, so try unchecking that box in Folder options and WAllah, It is really fixed finally.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP G62 laptop
OS
Windows 7 64-bit
CPU
AMD
Hello people,

I just today had this same problem in my Windows 7 profile.
The solution is to go to regedit, and change 2 keys to point to valid places:
Code:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\User Shell Folders\Personal
and
Code:
HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\Shell  Folders\Personal
You can set back the defaults by looking at how the other entries in those keys look like.

I'm not enterely sure if the second one is necessary, but I changed both to point to valid places and it works now.

In my case both were required. I knew my documents were in another profile but I forgot I moved the folder to the current profile. Thanks for the fix. Don't bother deleting your old profiles people. Too much unnecessary work.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Multiple Dell and HP
OS
Windows 7 Pro and Enterprise x86 and x64
CPU
Multiple 1.2 to 3.0
Motherboard
Multiple
Memory
Multiple 2gb to 8gb
Graphics Card(s)
Multiple
Sound Card
Multiple
Monitor(s) Displays
Multiple
Hard Drives
Multiple 80gb to 1 tb
PSU
Multiple
Case
Tower
Cooling
Multiple fans
Fixed by restoring drive letter assignment

First of all, THANKS TO EVERYONE who posted in this thread, as it illustrated through various examples that the problem was a missing drive (or, as it turned out in my case, a drive re-mapped from its previous letter assignment), when directories tied to a given user account are involved in one of the partitions on that drive.

I was checking old drives as well as one that seemed to have gone bad on my son's notebook. I connected that one to a serial interface, and an older parallel drive on the only parallel interface on the board, which means it was on the same cable as my "D:" drive, DATA, on which documents, etc., from my user profile are stored.

I usually test on a USB-to-ATA/ATAPI adapter cable, but there were issues with these two drives and I've discovered that sometimes you can fix problems by a normal drive connection, rather than through the USB adapters.

When I rebooted after adding the drives and went to look at them I got the explorer.exe server execution failed error.

To summarize what happened, my computer had assigned the letter "D" to one of the two partitions on the notebook drive. I had done this before (attaching drives to check them) without the computer changing drive letter assignments, just giving them new ones after all the other drives. I was able to fix it by reassigning the letter "D" through the Disk Management section of the Computer Management program.

Now a detailed account. I searched the error and saw the posts about making the administrator account active, so I did that.

I saw the posts about it being a missing drive and thought perhaps my "D" drive had become inaccessible because of the old parallel drive having a problem.

I shut the computer down, removed the added parallel drive, and rebooted but still had the error. So I tried to access the storage section on Computer Management, but could not find computer management by searching for it.

Rebooted into administrator, went into Explorer, saw the "Restore" partition from the notebook drive had been assigned the letter "D:" and my DATA drive was now I:, after other drives.

So I turned off the computer, disconnected the laptop drive, rebooted into my user account, but still had the server execution failed error.

I went to computer management but I had no "run as administrator" option on the right click menu. Ran it anyways, went to drive management, saw that there was no D: drive, and tried to change the letter on DATA back to D: but it did not offer me that choice.

So I rebooted into administrator, went to computer management, did have the run as administrator option, did that, went to drives, and it did show the option to assign D: to the DATA drive.

Rebooted into my user account and everything is working normally.

I've yet to test whether it was something on the notebook drive that forced the use of D: for the restore partition or if there was a problem with my old drive on the parallel interface that made the computer not see my "D" drive and thus it assigned the now-empty letter "D:" to the first partition on the notebook drive.

Before doing that, am going to create a new account for testing, because I think if the problem of letter bumping recurs it will be easier to fix on a user account where nothing is mapped to "D, avoiding (I hope) the "server execution failed" error if it happens.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
custom build
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Phenom II X4 955 (Black Edition)
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-870A-UD3
Memory
8 gigs
Graphics Card(s)
Nividia GeForce 8400 GS
Hard Drives
B: CD/DVD Burner (Internal) with a parallel-to-serial adapter
C: SYSTEM 96GB SSD on 6 mbps SATA
D: DATA 250GB on parallel interface
E: EDIT_VIDEO 2000 gig raid array of 1 gig drives 3mbps SATA
F: OLD VIDEO 3 GIG on 3 mbps SATA
G: BACKUP External
Antivirus
Microsoft
Browser
Usually Chrome, but also use Firefox and Opera
The MS fix definitely works! I had exactly the same problem when turned off Libraries feature using method described at this forum. Disabling opening Explorer windows in separate processes has helped.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
(More information)

I know this is an ancient post, but just I had this same problem and none of the "solutions" below worked. I found the solution myself:

I didn't realize, but earlier in the day, I had tried to edit my "Send To" list by typing "." (period) from the Run menu to delete unwanted destinations. I must have tried to delete the "My Computer" folder because when I checked "C:\Users\{profile}\", "My Computer" was missing. :p (If you can't open the File Explorer, use the "File" menu from almost any app to look for it.)

Fortunately, I already had another account with Admin privileges (everyone should, even if you're the only user, in case of disasters like this), copied the "C:\Users\{current profile}\My Computer" folder to the profile that was missing it, rebooted, and now everything is back to normal. :cool:

If you don't already have another User Account, create an empty "Read Only" folder in your "C:\Users\{profile}\" called "My Computer" and reboot. I didn't try it myself but it may work.

If that doesn't work, "Windows Repair" from the DVD may be your only option. :eek:

Hope this helps someone.
 
Last edited:

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
homebrew
OS
Win7 Home Premium x64
CPU
AMD Phenom II x4 920
Motherboard
Gigabyte MA790gs-ds4h
Memory
8gb
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 5850
Sound Card
Realtek
Monitor(s) Displays
Asus 26" lcd
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
Hard Drives
120gb Corsair Force GT SSD
1TB C:
500GB D:
various external drives
PSU
CoolerMax 750watt
Case
Antec
Cooling
Fans (5)
Keyboard
standard-101
Mouse
MS Optical trackball
Internet Speed
DSL 1.5gbit
Awesome worked beautifully for me. Thanks so much. I noticed my documents and others were pointing to the wrong drive. Once I corrected this after backing up the registry of course, it worked beautifully. Don't forget to backup the registry when working in it. Mistakes are made. :cry:
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
OS
Win 7 64 bit
This is an old thread, but here's an addition to all that's been said thus far. Had a 750GB HDD, which was partitioned into two partitions - C:\ was 125GB and D:\ was 550GB. Wanted to clone the 125GB System partition C:\ to an 128GB SSD. Had My Documents/My Pictures/My Music/My Pictures/Favorites/Contacts/Downloads/Searches folders redirected from C:\ partition to D:\ partition (this was in case something went wrong with Windows, I could at least save My Documents etc without having to scavenge thru the C:\ partition before reinstalling OS). Tried cloning the C:\ partition from HDD to the SSD with various software (Macrium, AOMEI, Acronis, EASEUS) but something got mixed up with drive letters, apparently, and thus the Server Execution Error.

Anyways, first did the registry trick, but it didn't work. Nevertheless, left the changes that were made to the registry. Rebooted, logged into my account but still was getting 'Server Execution Error'. So, fired up Computer Management, went to Local Users And Groups/Users and enabled Administrator account. Logged into the Administrator account, went into Users/Administrator folder and simply copied My Documents/My Pictures/My Music/My Pictures/Favorites/Contacts/Downloads/Searches folders to Users/sxtatic, since they were all were missing there.


Voila! Along with registry fix, this did the trick. Hopefully this, along with others' contributions, will help someone in need.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo Thinkpad T530
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Core i7-3630QM
Motherboard
Lenovo ThinkPad T530
Memory
16GB Corsair Value Select DDR3-1600
Graphics Card(s)
NVIDIA NVS 5400M
Sound Card
M-Audio Firewire 410
Monitor(s) Displays
Lenovo LP156WD1-TLB2/Acer KA240H
Screen Resolution
1600*900/1920*1080
Hard Drives
256GB Samsung 850 EVO mSATA/2TB Crucial MX500 SSD/750GB Western Digital WD7500BPKT
Mouse
Logitech G502
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