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I have a brand-new machine that we just installed Windows Server 2008 Enterprise on about two months ago. In the event log, I am seeing thousands of EventID 1035 logged. This is MsiInstaller reconfiguring about a dozen products over and over, looping about every half-hour.

Has anyone seen this? As a beginning, I did a general web search, and most solutions revolved around Dell System Center or Google toolbar being installed as the culprit.

We have neither of those products installed.

Thanks for your help,

Dale

4 Answers 4

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I can confirm the problem is triggered by WMI queries to the Win32_Product class. But as documented in this other question below, you cannot use the Win32reg_AddRemovePrograms if you don't have SCCM/SMS installed and even if you do would have to use Win32reg_AddRemovePrograms64 to get a list of 64bit programs

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2416278/64bit-equivalent-class-for-a-wmi-class-win32reg-addremoveprograms

None of this was documented before as a bad thing, actually as the proper way to do it. I think the choice by Microsoft to do a repair check at the same time as responding to the query is just bad design. A query should never cause changes to a system, that should be a different "function" (WMI method). A sensible design could have included a periodic check into their "system maintenance" featrure of the newer operating systems, because that's also configurable and makes sense to users/administrators.

Anyway this was an old server, actually about to be decommissioned (Windows 2003 64bit). But it did happen on all of our servers for many years (that was a major hit to performance now it's confirmed). So I'll have to check again on the newer 2008 R2 servers to see if this will be an ongoing production issue or not.

But what I really wonder is how the heck I can explain to teams of packagers and support engineers that they must not use that WMI query/API. We've got hundred of scripts and tools written by lots of different people for 1000s of packages. There's no way it'll ever happen. So this behaviour should be fixed as a critical design fault by MS if it's still occurring in 2008 R2 and other supported OS versions. We'll certainly escalate it if it's still the case!

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  • If you have a NEW question, please ask it by clicking the Ask Question button. If you have sufficient reputation, you may upvote the question. Alternatively, "star" it as a favorite and you will be notified of any new answers.
    – Scott Pack
    Oct 25, 2013 at 1:37
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    Well I am actually posting a new answer here so I think it's valid. Anyone looking at this should also visit the link I posted to the related question. I don't have enough reputation to do any of the other things and had more useful information to add than just a comment.
    – Tony Wall
    Nov 1, 2013 at 14:01
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UPDATE:


Windows Installer features "self repair" for installed applications. In essence this means that it will keep checking whether the files on disk and settings in the registry match what the respective package originally installed. These checks are generally not performed for everything that the package installed, but for what is referred to as "key paths".

In situations where you see self repair running in cycles, it generally means that some process on the system or another MSI has changed settings on the system that the package that subsequently self-repairs also changed. Like the guy said, it's like a humidifier and a dehumidifier fighting it out in the same room - or a dog chasing its own tail. You don't get anywhere till the conflict is found and eliminated. The MSI file will keep going "this is my resource, I am changing it back" over and over.

What is needed is to identify the conflict that the MSI files or system processes are quarreling about: http://www.installsite.org/pages/en/msifaq/a/1037.htm .

There are also other design errors in MSI files that can trigger the same problem such as key paths set to hard coded, user-specific paths: C:\Documents and settings\user1\Desktop. This path will not be found for another user logging on, and self repair results. Another example is key paths set to folders that are not writeable for the System account. Still another example is a key path set to a temporary file (which the system will delete eventually).

As you see, there are many scenarios but always the same problem: an MSI file is checking that the current installation is correct, and finds a discrepancy that it then tries to fix.

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After a hard research I found this Microsoft KB article indicating that those messages could be generated by group policy filter OR application querying Win32_Product WMI class. Unfortunately narrowing down which application is causing the problem is difficult.

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Old post I know but may be beneficial for those googling the error. We found Qualy agent was causing the issue on our devices. We have escalated to vendor.

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  • This is likely due to the agent querying for the installed products using the Win32_Product WMI class.
    – Greg Askew
    Jul 21, 2022 at 9:30

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