Easily fix broken Windows files now with System File Checker

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  • Опубликовано: 29 июн 2024
  • Does using the SFC /Scannow command never work for you? That was the case for me for a long time. That was until I learned the proper way to use it by combining it with DISM. The System File Checker is a very powerful tool that can fix a ton of problems if you use it right. Today, I'll show you how.
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    Commands used in Video
    DISM
    To check Windows image for issues (Doesn't do repairs)
    DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
    more advanced scan
    DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /ScanHealth
    Fix problems
    DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth
    - This might get stuck sometimes. Just wait for it to finish.
    use offline image
    DISM /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth /Source:D:\Sources\install.esd
    to disable windows update in the scan add (/LimitAccess)
    SFC
    to just verify run
    sfc /verifyonly
    to fix run
    SFC /scannow
    #Fix #Windows #Tech
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @jimmyhickey9297
    @jimmyhickey9297 Год назад +31

    You have no idea how many times this has saved me on everything from Server 2008R2 to Server 2019 as well as windows 8.1 installs to windows 11 build 20H2 ! Great to see this information shared with the community!

  • @Brothaman2k
    @Brothaman2k 7 месяцев назад +80

    Props for taking the simple step that most articles skip, which is telling me WHAT FILE I'M ACTUALLY LOOKING FOR AND WHERE. It's amazing people leave out simple details like it should just be known by default.

    • @daemon1143
      @daemon1143 6 месяцев назад +3

      Amen

    • @ngu_dave
      @ngu_dave 3 месяца назад +5

      Most "IT articles" on the internet explaining how to solve related problems are usually *"stealth advertising"* - they try not to give much information and assume that most people will still have issues...
      Their goal is to "sell" the reader there "super all-in-one software solution", which is full of bloatware and in the worst case contains malware :3

    • @1cy1c3bear
      @1cy1c3bear 3 месяца назад

      @@ngu_dave I've caught onto this, and never took them very seriously. They always end one of their steps with downloading some trial of a paid software during it.

  • @davemail
    @davemail Год назад +26

    New to Windows; recently discovered sfc and dism commands. Was looking for best practices advice. DAY-UM! The man knows his stuff and connects the dots for mere mortals like me. Going to watch every single video he has. Thank you, Rich.

  • @tedjohnson64
    @tedjohnson64 Год назад +15

    Very interesting way to get sfc to actually work! Really liked your presentation style as well, very rigorous and well thought out. Also appreciated the large green overlays with the cmd line details.

  • @smartinro.
    @smartinro. Год назад +394

    DISM, the Swiss knife of every technician.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +57

      It's definitely useful.

    • @repairman2be250
      @repairman2be250 Год назад +28

      In Windows 7 DISM is a disaster tool - error 87 one after the other.

    • @deamonbane3930
      @deamonbane3930 Год назад +11

      When it works

    • @machdaddy6451
      @machdaddy6451 Год назад +2

      Absolutely! Makes beginers look like pros.

    • @wjrneo2
      @wjrneo2 Год назад +5

      But only the good techs.
      Also, you should keep the old release isos around for just this purpose. Aka 1909, 20h1, 22h2.
      You want to use the iso that matches your installed release version.
      A command I love to frequently run on a confirmed good running system is the component cleanup command with the reset base switch. Just remember that after it’s been run you can’t uninstall any previously installed updates. So no rollbacks. Windows has a default scheduled task that executes this command, but without the ResetBase switch.
      Dism.exe /online /Cleanup-Image /StartComponentCleanup /ResetBase

  • @MrStupiuno
    @MrStupiuno Год назад +12

    I'm delighted to see someone finally creating high-quality content on advanced Windows topics!

  • @am.m.6008
    @am.m.6008 5 месяцев назад +5

    Props to you for being so informative and perfectly representing everything with a clear shot of your screen and not moving too fast. Plus the explanation of background/extra info is so much more helpful. The worst is when you try to ask a question/pose an issue on windows forums and there is the same verbatim copied and pasted answer a million times which hardly ever works, or some a**hole who refuses to help b/c you "don't give enough information" as if every user know every spec of their OS and how it functions. Cheers!

  • @yorickdesmet4836
    @yorickdesmet4836 Год назад +5

    This video couldn't be posted at a better time. Thanks!

  • @GimmilFactory
    @GimmilFactory Год назад +16

    I've been using these tools for years when ensuring stability and security after removing any malicious software or code on a system. This is great educational information for the community. Cheers for this!

  • @EricMilward
    @EricMilward Год назад +154

    Holy crap in the 15 years I've been doing this I swear you're the ONLY person I've seen actually do it right!! I get into so many arguments with people over this. So called "professionals", smh. I'm honestly surprised and relieved to see someone who ACTUALLY knows how to properly run an sfc scan. THANK YOU!!

    • @woswasdenni1914
      @woswasdenni1914 Год назад +3

      honestly aint right either. systemfiles are not getting corrupted without reason. first diagnose the reason then think if a repairattempt make sense or not.
      most of the time its a hardware but if its a virus than a reinstall is in order anyway.

    • @_K.A.R.
      @_K.A.R. Год назад +13

      @@woswasdenni1914 In my experience most of the time systemfiles get broken by faulty updates, calculation (CPU) and IO (RAM, BUS) errors that always can encounter even without a "real reason"

    • @paulpinecone2464
      @paulpinecone2464 Год назад

      Wow if nobody can figure out how to use a tool correctly, blame the victim.

    • @i_scopes_i3914
      @i_scopes_i3914 Год назад +4

      Hold shift while clicking restart, when recovery starts click advanced, command and run sfc in there because inside windows 11 files in use cannot be replaced while in use, sfc via recovery restores ALL sys files
      That's the proper way to run sfc effectively -_-

    • @FrigginGomer
      @FrigginGomer Год назад +2

      @@i_scopes_i3914 Exactly! I ran the DISM command from the mounted ISO file, then ran the sfc scan. It found nothing to repair. Went into recovery, command prompt, ran the sfc scan and voila it found and replaced corrupted files.

  • @ClefairyGodmother
    @ClefairyGodmother Год назад +4

    Great video! I'm a Tech and I loved this. I'm 6 months in and always learning but at the Helpdesk level I've been giving myself a nudge to run the DISM commands properly when I use sfc. I get much better results that way.

  • @abracadabra401
    @abracadabra401 2 месяца назад +2

    WOW!! DISM worked!! this was by far one of the greatest repair videos I have applied to my computer to date. My computer is running so much better. Thank you for all the GREAT information and it saved me $$$ with a not so smart technician.

  • @wilhelmsarasalo3546
    @wilhelmsarasalo3546 Год назад +71

    One time at a client's I started with sfc /scannow. It found no problems. Yet, what had been wrong was working after that. So, that one time I had an opposite problem from what you described.
    Thanks for putting all that stuff to one place. You were highly informative and I subscribed.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +10

      I get that sometimes too. Barely do anything and the issue mysteriously fixes itself. The customer asks "What did you do to fix it?"
      Me: 🤷‍♂️🤷‍♀️🤷
      Or
      Me: I say, "It took one look at me and said "Aw Shite, it's him. Quick, start working" 😄

    • @MacGuffin1
      @MacGuffin1 Год назад +1

      was that in 2012? it does nothing these days

    • @kuromiLayfe
      @kuromiLayfe Год назад +4

      the newer version of sfc /scannow only reports if there was an error if it actually is a system critical error.. so system file corruption that do not cause bsod’s are no longer reported unless you use verbose flags

    • @matheusgabry2113
      @matheusgabry2113 Год назад +3

      Me too. My Start Menu and all Metro style apps were not working on my W10 out of nowhere, and no amount of restarts were fixing that. I ran sfc /scannow and it found no errors, but after the procedure the Start Menu and all Metro apps were working again.

    • @_K.A.R.
      @_K.A.R. Год назад +1

      @@MacGuffin1 for me I can say that I had this kind of "magic" last year with an Windows 10 21H2, BUT around 2 month later (after daily usage with ~10hours a day) same Problem was there again (System-restarts out of nowhere). After that nothing (SFC / DISM / inplace-upgrade / driver clean and update / etc.) helped and I needed to reinstall the system. Then all worked fine for arount 4-5 weeks and everything began again.
      Since it is a custom install Image (on around 100 working systems) it have to be an hardware issue and I replaced the system. All working finde now for around 5 months.
      Checking the intel NUC (RAM, SSD, add-In card, turn off multithreading and/or turbo boost and of course dust clean, paste replacement) it have to be an defective motherboard.
      in short that "magics" happen some times BUT they might point to a bigger problem in future.

  • @srvuk
    @srvuk Год назад +4

    Very useful. I too discovered a few years ago that SFC scannow never found anything and had to delve deeper to use it effectively.

  • @dougsensei
    @dougsensei 11 месяцев назад

    This was so helpful. I was told by a online forum to run this and had no idea why it wasnt working. thanks for clearing things up!

  • @bazenga82
    @bazenga82 Год назад +53

    Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. In this day and age where people are so deceitful and shameless and rip people off, it is so nice to be able to troubleshoot and fix things on your own. I love learning new things and how and why they work. Thank you going the extra mile to not only share the RIGHT way to do it but explaining WHY. You've got my sub and I'm already watching more of your videos. Much love and appreciation sir.

  • @stage6fan475
    @stage6fan475 Год назад +4

    Very useful. Congrats on passing 100K subscribers.

  • @WyattOShea
    @WyattOShea Год назад +6

    Awesome video man. I did most of the fixes just in case there was something wrong. Came back with no errors but still great tool to have in the future when I inevitably mess something up and need to fix it without reinstalling windows from scratch haha.

  • @PCBEaR65
    @PCBEaR65 Год назад +1

    Rich, I am subbed. You may have helped me fix my wife's old laptop - which is looping in the Window recovery. I've been doing application support so long, my PC Tech skillz have withered a bit with all the tech evolutions. These videos are getting me back in my original game. I am filling my new 64GB KT USB and expect it to help with most family support I have to do.

  • @clinten3131
    @clinten3131 5 месяцев назад

    This seems to have fixed the "Memory could not be written" error I kept getting. Thank you for this guide and for explaining everything so it's easy to understand.

  • @surfx4804
    @surfx4804 Год назад +4

    Great info, very clear and much more than just sfc.
    Subbed!

  • @BornToPun7541
    @BornToPun7541 Год назад +20

    Had no idea you could use an ISO file in conjunction with DISM. Good to know!

  • @wneufeld416
    @wneufeld416 10 месяцев назад

    I've been living with a none responsive explorer every time I went into "my PC". This video allowed me to fix the issue and it is now working again! Subscribed. (I was able to fix it at the 7:56 minute mark, but then watched the rest of the video for your metrics and great info) :)

  • @user-lg7ko2ne1p
    @user-lg7ko2ne1p 7 месяцев назад +1

    Your advice and approach on 'Broken UEFI' is 100% practical. I've been sitting on a friends dell optiplex 5260 for a couple weeks looking for answers until your video. You've won over a loyal fan. Thanks alot Sir.

  • @Shadowongfuel
    @Shadowongfuel Год назад +5

    when i come to your channel my interest for computers spikes drastically and the thing is this is where im calm i know what to do and you help a long the way of fixing a computer

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      Glad my videos have helped you.

  • @buzzdrew7
    @buzzdrew7 Год назад +7

    I wish I had learned this sooner.
    I didnt know you needed to run sfc /scannow after running dism. This is going to save me a lot of headache and hopefully result in less computer re-images 😊.

  • @10MARC
    @10MARC 9 месяцев назад +5

    Great information. As a guy who has been fixing computers since the DOS days, I can attest that the built in "Repair tools" work about 5% of the time. (CHKDSK has always been fairly reliable, though)
    I gave up totally on SFC since I realized it almost never fixed anything, and wasted 30 minutes of time i could use reloading Windows over itself.
    These tips may actually make SFC useful!

  • @Enjoymentboy
    @Enjoymentboy Год назад +2

    Just wanted to give you a HUGE thanks for this video. I have an older (2009) HP laptop that has tools and utilities I can't get any longer so I cannot afford to format and reinstall. It became essentially unusable as even at idle it would be running 99% CPU and 8Gb RAM at 60°C+ temps even though it was literlaly doing nothing. SFC never helped at all. No amount of looking into this gave me the answers, although I suspect I wasn't searching using correct terminology to narrow it down. I was just about to give up and accept defeat when I found this. Ran through it all last night and I am happy to report I am currently typing this out on that very laptop with 5 tabs open AND a video being recoded in the background. Literally a world of difference and a whole new machine.
    THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @padders1068
    @padders1068 Год назад +3

    Excellent video, as ever! Keep up the good work!

  • @javierchik
    @javierchik Год назад +8

    Excellent and very well explained, very helpful, I am already making a notepad to put all the commands in a folder on the network so that I have them at hand. Some ideas for other videos you could make would also be about repairing the Windows boot when it cannot be repaired on its own, explaining bootrec, fixboot, fixmbr, etc., and also how to clone Windows to a new desktop with different hardware where Windows cannot always do it by itself and it sends you the message "no boot device found, please install boot device and try again". I haven't seen any normal videos that explain how to clone to a new desktop with different hardware and an NVMe disk."

    • @ApolloTheDerg
      @ApolloTheDerg Год назад +1

      I turned the restore health and sfc into a bat file, it’s been super handy, all I do is run it as administrator and it’s part of my quarterly computer maintenance for a small company, kept the same install of windows on these systems for years with minimal headaches this way, often catches small issues early and quickly sorts them out.

  • @davidanderson4091
    @davidanderson4091 Год назад +2

    I have a batch file that has the two lines you mention, the DISM restore health line and the SFC line. I have this on a schedule to run every Monday morning in the small hours. Keeps my system in good health!

  • @TheEVGuy85
    @TheEVGuy85 Год назад +1

    I've got this in a tiny little command file. Double click, runs as admin, solves issues. Thank you for sharing, this saves so much time!

  • @ResistCircuitResist
    @ResistCircuitResist Год назад +3

    I work in an enterprise environment and agree, sfc rarely fixes issues, but for a different reason. Its rarely system file specific. However great video, nice to know that the file cache can be upgraded with dism.

  • @roadcyclist00
    @roadcyclist00 Год назад +111

    This is excellent. Clear, relevant and to the point. Thank you.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +14

      Glad it helped. Thank you.

    • @rttp-righttothepoint6656
      @rttp-righttothepoint6656 Год назад +3

      @@CyberCPU hey man. I'm SOL. Pc hung up, turned off. Nbd just restarted it. Booted fine. Loaded windows fine. Go to my computer. All of my external drives are SOL. Say corrupted and whatever. I highly doubt they are. I just can't get the computer to see them. I downloaded a BUNCH of partition repair programs, and none of them did what I needed. I know there is a fix like gparted or whatever,or boot to linux or something and use their tools. Please don't recommend I just use something to backup my data off of it. I know I can do that. But I'm 99% sure I can revive the drive back to normal, I did it once, I just forgot how. And lastly, anyway to stop that god forbid it happens again.
      PLEASE PLEASE PLEASEEEEEEEEEEEE Need HELP ASAP BOYS AND GIRLS.

    • @_BYR47
      @_BYR47 11 месяцев назад

      Ehh he can talk a lot less these long ass videos are overkill, none the less it’s good knowledge.

    • @eaglegp2541
      @eaglegp2541 8 месяцев назад

      @@CyberCPU I am 15 miles from Midway Ca, where the lotto was won of about $1.5B and was in line when the winner was getting their ticket, but bought mine 2 mile away at Dons in Frazier Pk, and if i had one, I would have made you a partner with a large investment

  • @Spunky.Streams
    @Spunky.Streams 5 месяцев назад +1

    Hey man! Been having panic attacks all day, and just desperate to get out of poverty but the last two days my computer kept freezing and my streams breaking down. But FINALLY things are looking up after following your tips. Absolutely love you and the WAY you teach. Everything about you is awesome and the world needs more of you. Bless your soul 🕊️

    • @northside3701
      @northside3701 5 месяцев назад

      You need to ask Trump for another Stimulus check😂

    • @lastwymsi
      @lastwymsi Месяц назад

      100% If you understand this stuff, study it and make a career out of it. People who understand more technical computer bits are very sought after and can make great pay, especially at the corporate level

  • @rick.reckage128
    @rick.reckage128 Год назад

    Thank you for this instruction video.
    I had not run SFC / scannow on my Windows 10 because: the reason of this video: SFFC never worked.
    However, I ran it first and did actually find system files that it repaired.
    Then I ran the DISM commands - the RestoreHealth - and it ran successfully - then the SFC /scannow which the second time did not find any problems.
    Thank you again for outstanding instructions.

  • @TheCynysterMind
    @TheCynysterMind Год назад +6

    Well done!
    I have been using both command for a while.
    I would like to see your take on how to rebuild/repair a corrupt user profile.
    And how to fix a broken Microsoft Store. (especially how disabling UAC can mess up the store)
    I am continually amazed at the number of ways people (especially my extended family members) can screw up their profile.

  • @TheEvolvingAudioNut
    @TheEvolvingAudioNut Год назад +36

    Excellent video. I've been using windows since the beginning when it was essentially only a crude graphic overlay on top of DOS. Having gone through Win 95 and 98 etc. I was at a point where I created a clone of a fresh install and would revert to that every year or so as the computer became less responsive over time. So yeah, I became a sledgehammer guy. 😁 Old habits are hard to break.
    I built my current main rig a couple years ago and was considering breaking out the hammer. I'll put that on hold while I await your videos that further explore this topic. After running the "RestoreHealth" on my cache files, SFC found several files/directories "is owned twice or has its security set twice". It also found one DLL file with a hash mismatch and replace the bad file with the new version from cache.
    An idea for this series (though I'm guessing you already have it on the list) is to talk about the various utility programs out there that profess to be the "be all / end all", "must have" program to keep your computer at tipity top condition.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      Glad it helped.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 Год назад +3

      Wasn't the old advice to do a clean reinstall every so often to "speed up your system'? I've never done that btw, but that was the thinking a few years ago.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +9

      @@raylopez99 that was what people did back in Windows XP days. Since Windows 7, it's been very possible to keep Windows systems running efficiently for years. At this point in my career it's become a point of pride to always do what you can to save the OS without reinstalling. I probably reinstall maybe 5% of the systems I work on. Some are simply to messed up to fix. But most are fixable.

    • @stage6fan475
      @stage6fan475 Год назад +3

      @@raylopez99 Yes, that was the old advice. I started at Win 3.1 and for a long time clean install every so often was recommended whenever things got slow or weird.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +3

      90% certain your hard drive is going south. Software can't fix a hardware problem. Data corruption is one sign of hard drive related issues.

  • @MiElas
    @MiElas 2 месяца назад +1

    This guy makes my excited to run some commands, love the energy

  • @Nipprod
    @Nipprod 8 месяцев назад

    I always knew how to use two commands, but I had no idea why I needed to use both. Thank you.

  • @PeterCphotos
    @PeterCphotos Год назад +3

    yes would like to see a complete list of all repair commands. Good tutorial.

  • @goofyrulez7914
    @goofyrulez7914 Год назад +6

    Thank you so much! (not just for this video but for all the help you have given me.)

  • @treacletree
    @treacletree Год назад +1

    I have absolutely been guilty of nuking several Windows installs, being the designated "fix my computer"-guy among family and friends (I have absolutely no education on the subject, I'm just not afraid to google stuff). Really happy to add this to my toolbox. Thanks!

  • @FeedScrn
    @FeedScrn Год назад +1

    Thank you for a concise to-the-point video.

  • @domitalain1
    @domitalain1 Год назад +5

    LOVE LOVE LOVE YOUR CHANNEL BY THE WAY AND IT HAS HELPED ME ENOURMOUSLY WITH MY COMPUTER ISSUES.

  • @nicklisac4667
    @nicklisac4667 Год назад +8

    I did what you said exactly like you said and it worked just like you said and it was easy just like you said it would be and I'm impressed.
    Now I just have to learn how to construct a sentence properly.
    👍👍👍🤣🤣
    Thankyou

  • @sgtmasaru7437
    @sgtmasaru7437 10 месяцев назад

    YOU have gained a subscriber! Info that i never knew and most people never post! You are a great helper!

  • @billturner5908
    @billturner5908 10 месяцев назад

    THANK YOU! I was at a loss and considering re-installing the OS, which I REALLY, REALLY did not want to do. Thank you sol much for this valuable information. Now subscribed.

  • @NotEvents
    @NotEvents Год назад +4

    tysm for making this video!
    Before seeing this video, I did not have a clear picture of how dism and sfc were related, but now I do!
    Now I worry about how many Windows installations I failed to repair / save through my previous ignorance. 😓

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      Glad it helped.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +1

      40 lashes for you Sir minus one. Now go and be fruitful. 😉

  • @raylopez99
    @raylopez99 Год назад +3

    Oh yeah! That trademark ending by CyberCPU Tech of getting up at the end of the video and walking away without an abrupt ending...never gets old. Good stuff in this video, bookmarked for future reference

  • @Twenty_Six_Hundred
    @Twenty_Six_Hundred Год назад +2

    When i first did work experience in a repair shop i was blown away with how little the techs actually knew. They all had two PCs, the customers and their own to google solutions. Hardware issues was just a processes of elimination as they would just change out parts till the issue was gone. As a keen newbie eager to learn when asking questions i was told to just google it. There was one guy they all thought was the genius as he actually did know a fair amount. But far out it was an eye opener discovering how little everyone else knew. If they couldn't solve the issue after changing hardware and googling software fixes, the customer was told their PC was outdated or the cost would be too much and they were better off purchasing one of their new pre-builds.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      I have a saying that I use quite regularly. If a technician was any good they wouldn't work at a big box store. There's too much money in going independent then working for minimum wage fixing computers. The reason they're there in the first place is because they have more they need to learn.

  • @Jeffmd2020
    @Jeffmd2020 14 дней назад

    Brother I’ve been watching the damn sfc /scannow videos literally ALL DAY LONG!!!! And every single time I did the SFC it would say corrupted files were detected but not all of them could be repaired and I was at a lose till I found this video!!!! I did ALL of the DISM steps and after the last one of RestoreHealth it said it was complete so I ran the scannow command AAAAAAGAIN!! And it said ALL corrupt files were found and repaired!!!! THANK YOU SOOOOO MUCH MY GUY!!

  • @danielsidaway719
    @danielsidaway719 Год назад +50

    Another excellent tutorial. As someone who's experience goes back to GW Basic and MS-DOS, we understand that Windows is simply a Graphical User Interface; to make using a computer easier for everyone, novice to pro, but when the GUI gets wonky, it sometimes takes DOS commands to sort it out. I've had many an anxious client who thought they would lose everything; some did usually due to electrical anomalies or to a physically crashed hard drive.....AND NO BACKUP. Microsoft did do some things right.

    • @Redline1998766
      @Redline1998766 6 месяцев назад

      As for all computer related changing operations: No backup no pity.

  • @ChrisSmith-rm6xl
    @ChrisSmith-rm6xl Год назад +60

    Suggestion for your series: once you get Windows set up just the way you want it, make an image with clonezilla. You should cover the difference between a disk image and a partition image, and what to do if the new drive/partition you are restoring to is smaller that the one you saved from

    • @jmchichstudio9145
      @jmchichstudio9145 Год назад +6

      +, but I would recommend using something like acronis. Clonezilla had never worked for me (at least for Windows installations, Linux imaging worked like a charm)

    • @homeFall1
      @homeFall1 Год назад +2

      @@jmchichstudio9145 we use Clonezilla extensively at work to backup and deploy large batches of mostly Windows PCs. It works like a charm for us.

    • @aaronjones4529
      @aaronjones4529 Год назад

      @@homeFall1 ... which suggests it might be all the more reason for them to do an instructional video on how to use CloneZilla ... for Jmchich STUDIO 😅
      (I'm not really having a dig - I've always wanted to know how to do this, and have made a few attempts in the past but they've never worked properly for me 🙅‍♂)

    • @jmchichstudio9145
      @jmchichstudio9145 Год назад

      @@homeFall1 uh, okay, I might give clonezilla another shot. Maybe I was using it wrong, who knows :)

    • @sopcannon
      @sopcannon Год назад

      windows does have a back up image built in

  • @Hyunkelw
    @Hyunkelw 4 месяца назад +2

    Sir, you just earned yourself a new subscriber. I've recently updated my system from a 7th generation Intel chip to a AMD ryzen DDR5 system, and Windows is giving me boot errors NONSTOP. I've tried everything, nothing works so far, but I've got the feeling I might find what I need here. Kudos

    • @arcrides6841
      @arcrides6841 2 месяца назад

      did it end up working for you?

    • @Hyunkelw
      @Hyunkelw 2 месяца назад

      @@arcrides6841 unfortunately, no. but I did a dumb mistake while checking if my RAM slots where defective (which they were). So, the fix suggested here did not work per se, but that's a whole different matter.

  • @MisterWoes
    @MisterWoes Год назад +1

    Just an awesome video! Subscribed

  • @RetroNook
    @RetroNook Год назад +3

    Congrats on 100k

  • @captaindaedalus1
    @captaindaedalus1 Год назад +3

    Every once in a while, my system will do something strange. It's never been enough that I felt compelled to start making changes. But I think you may have just given me the answer to getting rid of these little irritations. Thank you. I'll be trying it out soon.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +1

      Let me know how it works out.

    • @captaindaedalus1
      @captaindaedalus1 Год назад +3

      @@CyberCPU I just ran sfc. It found corrupt files, as expected, but it corrected them without having to do anything else. A second run of System File Checker confirmed all is now well. I suppose I don't have any older files to contend with. Thanks for all your helpful videos. I'm a subscriber, and I often learn from your work.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад

      90+ percent of the time when I run SFC, it fixes the issue. I just don't run toward SFC too soon.

  • @RedGunTurret
    @RedGunTurret 16 дней назад

    Really appreciate the clear explanation about all the solutions

  • @rmorenberg
    @rmorenberg Год назад

    good info with no extras. thanks man

  • @d0h
    @d0h Год назад +14

    Solid walkthrough for DISM repairs, but for anyone that needs youtube videos to teach them it's honestly easier with the modern windows to use the media creation tool and do an in-place upgrade of windows (Select Upgrade Now -> Keep my programs and files) instead of saving the ISO. In my experience it repairs everything that DISM/SFC will ever fix, plus uses an offline Defender to scan and remove any malicious changes to the OS.

    • @grantross2609
      @grantross2609 Год назад +4

      the thing is this can be pretty damned tedious & frustrating !
      too many data files get lost and as for setting up from scratch........

    • @opcartmell
      @opcartmell 11 месяцев назад +2

      Tried it your way a month ago and I'm still restoring files and programs. I selected keep my programs and files and lost almost everything.

  • @alantorrance6153
    @alantorrance6153 Год назад +12

    Thank you for an excellent set of instructions. I have been typing flat out, pausing the video frequently while I type and check what I typed. Saved to my "Download " folder under an appropriate filename for easy future access. I shall probably make use of this soon as a safety check of my system. If there is a problem with file corruption, this should be so much better and days quicker than reinstalling Windows and then all the software that goes with it (a LOT).

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      During the preparation for this video I ran sfc on every Windows computer I have and it pretty much fixed most of the little stupid little problems they had. Very powerful tool.

  • @hvagamers5371
    @hvagamers5371 Год назад +2

    Thank you for showing all of this to us. Personally, I thought this was common sense, that everyone knew about this... Now seeing this video and all the comments, I understand it's not like that. And to be clear, I'm 20 and I know about this for some years already (mostly because when I run into computer problems, I try to resolve them myself..... though I made many mistakes). I really appreciate ur work, that u share all of this and I hope ur work and videos will reach all those people who run into problems or want to learn something new.

  • @robertdesilverio3307
    @robertdesilverio3307 8 месяцев назад

    Excellent! Illuminating, practical and helpful. Thanks

  • @Ladioz
    @Ladioz Год назад +3

    Great video!! So useful for people who will have a genuine problem

  • @TheEvolvingAudioNut
    @TheEvolvingAudioNut Год назад +5

    An idea that dovetails nicely with the topic of fixing a broken windows install is troubleshooting hardware issues. That particular rabbit hole runs deep. An example from my recent experience...
    Over the past week or so my gaming rig started doing some weird things such as programs suddenly crashing or doing things other than the command I had just given it. Other times it would wink out and do a hard reboot. Running Memtest86 found bad memory. I had all four slots filled with 8GB DIMMS. I checked each one individually and Memtest86 found issues with every one. I was thinking that it would be unlikely in the extreme to have four DIMM fail at once. I was thinking perhaps the mem controller on the MB took a dump. As I had some laying around, I took some spare mem and installed it. No failures were found. Yesterday I bought a pack of mem (2x16GB rather than 4x8GB). My thought is perhaps having tightly packed DIMMS on a hard running gaming rig is not the best thing. So far so good.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +1

      All 4 slots of memory being full has no bearing on the computer operation except if the memory is blocked from air flow, which the memory will accept until it ages.
      If I had all 4 memory boards showing errors, remove all but one, jot down the faulty addresses of each for comparison, test each memory in a different slot and finally test in another computer if available.
      Seems like you did a good job and solved your issue. Stranger things have happened.

    • @ScoutReaper-zn1rz
      @ScoutReaper-zn1rz 5 месяцев назад

      Actually, if you were using all 4 slots and had XMP enabled you might have had a problem because of that. There are cases where the memory controller can't run all 4 slots at the XMP rating as the XMP is technically an overclock and can cause odd behavior/crashes. You did the right thing by resorting to only using 2 slots for RAM.

  • @mimi19932
    @mimi19932 10 месяцев назад

    Hey, it worked!!! Thanks a lot for helping me out. I was gonna reinstall Windows because nothing was solving my problems. You're a lifesaver. Subscribing!

  • @user-uc7fb6md2f
    @user-uc7fb6md2f 7 месяцев назад

    omg you are an absolute The best i have seen u have any idea what i went threw and what I been threw with this SFC I literally backed up my files and was getting ready to format and start all over again cuz i just couldn't find a way to solve this the amount of articles i have read and website visited and couldn't find no solutions till I came here . Thank YOUUUUU SO MUCCCCCCCCHHHHH. and since i have backed up all my files and was ready to format and start all over again am JUST gonna go head and start all over cuz I was at the point of restarting my computer and installing fresh windows literally my next power down or restart was formatting my drive . I thank u so much your an absolute amazing I subscribe to your channel. YOUR AMAZING Thank You

  • @iwillhackyourpc2750
    @iwillhackyourpc2750 Месяц назад +2

    I was just about to reinstall Windows I swear , when I came across this masterpiece by God's grace. Even Microsoft were like-"You ain't gettin' anywhere without a fresh install"...Thanks once again dude for saving my Lappy😊😊😊

  • @markc871
    @markc871 Год назад +5

    Thanks for this, just used the dism from iso source technique on a misbehaving win 11 machine, SFC found and repaired a corrupt file. Will be interesting to see if the misbehaviour goes away..
    Really enjoy your channel, very pragmatic, helpful and entertaining. Keep up the good work.

  • @GTAModsShowcase
    @GTAModsShowcase 3 месяца назад

    It worked! You are a life saver. Thank you so much for making this clear yet detailed tutorial. Keep up the good work ❤

  • @SALSASOULRECORDS
    @SALSASOULRECORDS Год назад

    Amazing man thank you so much.
    This is the type of content we all need.
    Thank you and take care.

  • @evenblackercrow4476
    @evenblackercrow4476 Год назад +10

    All good stuff. Thanks for the video. Nuke-n-pave is the last thing I try before opening a second story window.
    In my experience using dism, the "limitaccess" phrase was particularly useful when the windows update mechanism itself was broken, too, and would cause a dism error while attempting to use the esd source for the repair.

  • @ShadeAssault
    @ShadeAssault Год назад +9

    Well. This makes so much sense. I always hate the forums that do just what you said. They never mention DISM, or if they do, they don't mention SFC. I've known about both tools forever but didn't know exactly what they did and that they compliment each other. Thanks for throwing some more knowledge into my brain toolbox.

  • @schallfezt
    @schallfezt 9 месяцев назад

    THATS A GENIUS STEP, because this BSOD (critical error) caused by corrupted system file, and we replace it with a NEW system file!
    If anyone have this problem too, I will share this video without hesitation.
    Great job pal, thank you.

  • @arvooo
    @arvooo Год назад

    Excellent video. Well made and very clear to help people understand!

  • @opulentnotes
    @opulentnotes Год назад +5

    Thanks for sharing these cool commands! I've actually been using DISM commands to help fix corrupted files on a customer's PC majority of the time, and usually stop at /restorehealth. I had no idea you could run sfc /scannow afterwards -- I always thought it just was not doing a darn thing so I omitted it out of the process. Definitely will try this process next time 🙂
    There was one instance where DISM was loading in CMD and it would get stuck at 64% and not move for several mins to a couple hours (even tried rerunning the command), why is that?

    • @glebglub
      @glebglub Год назад

      my guess is the anti-virus going mental scanning every single file that is being manipulated on a spinning-platter HDD, alongside slow internet speeds as dism is updating files through windows update (which would thence increase how much work the antivirus is doing as it's effectively scanning the same file 3 or more times and communicating with the cloud server about it, depending on your settings). could also be the storage device is way too full so it can't move files around as efficiently (typically ~15% free space is recommened iirc). maybe only 1 stick of RAM operating at minimal frequency, overheating on the CPU as the cooler shifted in transport, especially if it's a heckin' chonker like my NH-D15 (though for these I'd recommend unmounting the cooler as it can damage your motherboard/cpu in transit, at least without that expandable foam stuff SI's use for pre-builts to keep it in place).
      but I'm no expert, so there may be some other things going on too I'm not aware of, these are just my thoughts without knowing more of the system(s) you were working on

    • @opulentnotes
      @opulentnotes Год назад

      @@glebglub Thanks dude, this is pretty helpful info as I did not know the anti-virus plays a role in this. I work for a big corporate company, and our company PCs are basically all laptops that have 10th gen and higher CPUs and NVMe M.2 SSDs. Your guess is as good as mine, our machines have McAfee and its tied to group policies to make sure the device is in compliance. The internet connection could be a possibility -- as since covid we use remote connection to troubleshoot machines and requires us to connect to a VPN which tunnels to our company server. We do this in order to elevate admin privs on the user's machine (we need to do this to even access CMD as Admin)

    • @TomMannHome
      @TomMannHome 10 месяцев назад

      Wonderful tutorial!!! Great clarity! I’m definitely subscribed now! … One question / suggestion tho: Could you please comment on the best way to accomplish the same thing (ie, repairing the OS without reinstalling it and possibly losing all the installed apps & user data) on a computer that won’t boot at all?

  • @lorddemancio
    @lorddemancio Год назад +93

    The real nightmare begins when DISM doesnt work.....

    • @jamesluttrell2198
      @jamesluttrell2198 2 месяца назад +9

      Great just what I wanna hear

    • @16dvnk7
      @16dvnk7 2 месяца назад +3

      Yeah

    • @EyePapiii
      @EyePapiii 2 месяца назад +6

      Bro it blue screens when I do that restore health what do I do

    • @gyoerdy7832
      @gyoerdy7832 2 месяца назад +1

      Reinstall

    • @benziongoldsmith7388
      @benziongoldsmith7388 Месяц назад +9

      I got error 87 and it tells me the command (restorehealth and other commands) option is not recognized in this context.

  • @DVTOM
    @DVTOM 11 месяцев назад

    Great tutorial! Subscribed and Liked! Worked perfectly! I've never seen my system 100% EVER before before doing this!

  • @hvanwouwen6394
    @hvanwouwen6394 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you for making this video, it saved my PC for a fresh install. Super happy with it.

  • @rmrestivo
    @rmrestivo Год назад +3

    Perfect ... thank you 👍

  • @phoenixx5092
    @phoenixx5092 Год назад +3

    Also if you are doing an offline SFC you should also always run a chkdsk c: /r (or /f if its an ssd and you dont want to burn sectors too much) first so the windows folder isnt corrupt

    • @afj2276
      @afj2276 Год назад

      Yes I agree as part of good housekeeping and I have come across this plus system file errors

  • @daxxdog
    @daxxdog 28 дней назад

    Very useful and you make it so easy to understand.

  • @TopGGGGGGGG
    @TopGGGGGGGG 2 месяца назад

    Awesome video always helps when i have issues with system, THANK YOU!

  • @MDFGamingVideo
    @MDFGamingVideo Год назад +6

    It's a balancing act, based largely on knowledge capture of known -vs- new issues/fixes. Turn-around time determines the best approach. * IF * you * KNOW * you can use SFC / DISM / other tools to fix or restore a known issue, and you know that is the ONLY issue, go for it. However, there is another side of the scale to consider...
    In the enterprise when it takes you 1 hour to backup, re-image, and restore a user's desktop, it may be FAR more time effective to do that. You could spend HOURS troubleshooting and repairing multiple issues, across multiple service calls, all while impacting end user productivity.
    This is why documentation and knowledge sharing/building is critical to service and support success.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +3

      Well, that's just it. It comes down to experience. Historically it's the big box store techs that don't have a lot of experience that tend to wipe systems more often.
      The argument can be made that this happens more in a corporate environment because the systems don't have as much personal data on them. However, when you're working with consumers saving the OS is a lot more important.
      Yes, it takes less time to just wipe the operating system and reload it. However you also have to factor in the three on-site trips getting Grandma's scanner to work the way it used to because she can't get used to it and putting the links to her bank and Amazon back on the desktop because you can't figure out how to use the search bar in a browser. 🤣😂
      I charge a flat rate in my shop so the customer pays the same whether it takes me an hour or 5 hours. Because I've been doing this for over 20 years I have the experience to be able to still make money with a flat rate. For every computer that takes me 5 hours to fix I have 10 others that I fixed in a half hour and it's all the same flat fee.

    • @sonictech1000
      @sonictech1000 Год назад +2

      I deal mostly with small businesses and most of these users have a ton of customizations and special tools that can take forever to get working on a fresh install. Some examples: An rdp connection to their time clock/HR provider, a VPN connection to their video security provider, A connection to their POS system, QuickBooks, Industry specific software etc. On top of that,the problem often came from something the user recently installed (or updated) and the first thing they will do when I leave is to reinstall that thing. Better to get to the bottom of the problem if possible.

  • @bitcomputers
    @bitcomputers Год назад +3

    Great show thanks for your great tips. Will this work in Safe mode?

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      Yes.

    • @bitcomputers
      @bitcomputers Год назад +2

      @@CyberCPU Thank you so much your the first content creator that replied to any of my messages

  • @marklewis1750
    @marklewis1750 Год назад

    I'm subscribing. Your video on Uefi windows repair is excellent. Another thing windows does is delete windowsold folder after about a month. I lost a load of data thinking I had time to backup. Great videos btw.

  • @robertpenoyer9998
    @robertpenoyer9998 Год назад +1

    Excellent information and advice. Thanks!

  • @DavidNationSr
    @DavidNationSr Год назад +3

    good idea

  • @LickTheShaft
    @LickTheShaft Год назад +4

    "Nuke and pave" is quite common depending on the corporate environment, unfortunately. In my org, the (few thousand) PCs we still have that are fat client that can't be on VDI, if a problem is going to take longer than say, 45 minutes to an hour to fix, and it doesn't have any sort of one-off rare specialty software that someone, somewhere managed to lose a license key to, just PXE boot it and fresh install the corporate image and move on.
    Me personally, I LOVE puzzles and troubleshooting, but I work on the server side of things, not end-user PCs, so that works out well for me.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +2

      Yes, it's common in corporate environments, and big box stores.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +1

      @Terra Prime I understand the corporate mentality of "Nuke and Pave" as most corporate PCs are not filled with various software from who knows where. Having a few corporate images and a few new unused PCs is the way to go, especially when all client data is server side. I wish my life was that easy.

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +3

      ​@@bc-ad-infinity It's hard to get a corporate job when your skill set is not focused on narrow certification even when you can run rings around the certified. Troubleshooting is one skill that develops over time and cannot be covered in a book as well as it's learned in the field. I knew a guy that had a bachelors in computer science and he literally didn't know anything about real computers. He asked me if I thought he could learn computers. I assured him that if he could work to get a degree (he already had that) and if he "liked" computers, then "Yes, it's entirely possible you'll do well."

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +2

      @@bc-ad-infinity Funny (but not so funny) experience you had. 😁
      I've heard of this before and I can imagine there are more like our "professor" in the halls of higher(?) Education. I like your comeback..🙂

  • @John-jd8vx
    @John-jd8vx 3 месяца назад

    Terrific information. Liked and subscribed. Thank you

  • @CasualCommodore
    @CasualCommodore Год назад +1

    This is excellent! Goes right in the bank. 🙂 Subbed.

  • @JCLIMITLESS
    @JCLIMITLESS Год назад +5

    I'm not a tech but I run tons of programs and software and need to fix things within Windows from time to time. I personally would rather just wipe a broken OS rather than chase down specific files or issues because most times its just faster for me.

    • @22stunt45
      @22stunt45 Год назад +1

      good point

    • @nikolatesla169
      @nikolatesla169 Год назад

      That's right I'll do the same if it's my computer, but when it's a client's computer and they have a lot of software that I'm going to reinstall and download if I don't have the installers, maybe they lose the activation Keys... They don't want to lose some specific configurations etc etc then I would rather do this fix...

  • @kado897
    @kado897 Год назад +15

    The one step before a clean install that is missed out in these videos is the repair install which allows you to keep your data and programs.

    • @CyberCPU
      @CyberCPU  Год назад +8

      I will likely do a video on that as well.

    • @ZERARCHIVE2023
      @ZERARCHIVE2023 Год назад

      @@CyberCPU Public utility it is

  • @markaruski
    @markaruski Год назад +2

    Great info, thank you!

  • @mowatrcm1
    @mowatrcm1 Год назад +1

    Awesome stuff. Thank you.👍🙏

  • @Cookiein7
    @Cookiein7 Год назад +3

    Many thanks for this. Now added to my ever growing list of CMD scans and fixes. Cheers again. Built my PC about ten years ago, and it's still chugging along. Once a month or two I run scans, fixes, clean ups and so on, and it's fine. New build soon now I'm retired, but thinking of a Linux system. What puts me off is I'm so used to the various video, photo, and other prog's I've installed to over the years. But perhaps now I should move on. Perhaps now, because my system will not update to Windows 11 .

    • @glebglub
      @glebglub Год назад

      you can force windows 11 to install, though personally I stick to the LTSC branch for every windows install now and windows 11 LTSC isnt out until next year.
      as for linux, you can always dual-boot until get to grips with it; I'd recommend VanillaOS as, even though it's pretty recently out, it's pretty secure and it allows you to install arch/debian/fedora/flatpack packages through containers, so you won't need to distro-hop if you find a program that's ONLY on one flavour of linux, or one's buggy/not updated/etc. (though it has a much larger disk footprint due to the ABroot thing they have going on, and how many containers you use)

    • @glebglub
      @glebglub Год назад

      oops forgot to mention, don't forget WINE is a thing that exists in linux that allows you to run windows programs on linux (YMMV depending on what program you use though)

    • @Cookiein7
      @Cookiein7 Год назад +1

      @@glebglub Many thanks for that. When the time comes I will investigate, but may just use a new broom and bite the bullet. A friend of mine, whom built his own server, keeps nagging me to do so.

    • @glebglub
      @glebglub Год назад

      @@Cookiein7 I'm more like Trigger, been using the same broom for 20 years; it's had 17 new heads and 14 new handles! if you can't escape Microsoft like I can (though fingers crossed Claesson-Edwards finally ports over Breakaway so I can), I highly suggest using Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC IoT 2021 (with a dash of NTlite and O&O to automate the setup and strip out telemetry). otheriwse happy hopping and good luck finding alternatives

  • @SilentPlain
    @SilentPlain Год назад +4

    I'd first do a S.M.A.R.T.'s parameters check to rule out any HDD/SSD failure, then go on with the commands. In some cases, hardware failures can be a potential problem that can be easily spotted with any proper software designed for it (there are a lot of free options out there), thus saving time figuring out what might be wrong and how to fix it (it takes no more than a few seconds to run a diagnose). Sometimes, BSODs are simply caused by corrupted system files that are stored in bad sectors...
    Just my "2 cents".

    • @SpaceCadet4Jesus
      @SpaceCadet4Jesus Год назад +1

      Hey...what are you doing here?? 🤨 You're too smart giving away your best practice advice. 😄 (I wrote a similar comment in this video). So many repair shops run to software fixes when it's smarter to always check hardware (and faster too).
      Have you heard the saying?: "If it's a penney for your thoughts and you throw your two cents in, .....then someone .....somewhere ....is making a penney"

  • @rogeliobuot7091
    @rogeliobuot7091 Год назад +1

    THANK YOU FOR YOUR INFORMATIVE GUIDANCE, very good

  • @Stedmister
    @Stedmister Год назад +2

    Great video man, yeah I was told about DSIM, didn't know all the switches thanks