STOP: c000021a {Fatal System Error} The initial session process or system process terminated unexpectedly












-1














I'm encountering such an error after expanding disk (done by Hyper-V) space on virtual machine.



STOP: c000021a {Fatal System Error} The initial session process or system process terminated unexpectedly with a status of (0x00000000) (0xc000012d 0x001003f0).



The virtual server there is Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition, which is also Domain Controller, now my whole environment is down :/
I've tried to repair Windows - but there is no restore point, and using command line, I've also tried the sfc /SCANNOW /OFFBOOTDIR /OFFWINDIR, but got error "Windows Resource
Protection could not perform the requested operation"










share|improve this question






















  • I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
    – Mike
    Jun 7 '11 at 19:59










  • No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
    – christof
    Jul 11 '11 at 8:10
















-1














I'm encountering such an error after expanding disk (done by Hyper-V) space on virtual machine.



STOP: c000021a {Fatal System Error} The initial session process or system process terminated unexpectedly with a status of (0x00000000) (0xc000012d 0x001003f0).



The virtual server there is Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition, which is also Domain Controller, now my whole environment is down :/
I've tried to repair Windows - but there is no restore point, and using command line, I've also tried the sfc /SCANNOW /OFFBOOTDIR /OFFWINDIR, but got error "Windows Resource
Protection could not perform the requested operation"










share|improve this question






















  • I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
    – Mike
    Jun 7 '11 at 19:59










  • No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
    – christof
    Jul 11 '11 at 8:10














-1












-1








-1







I'm encountering such an error after expanding disk (done by Hyper-V) space on virtual machine.



STOP: c000021a {Fatal System Error} The initial session process or system process terminated unexpectedly with a status of (0x00000000) (0xc000012d 0x001003f0).



The virtual server there is Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition, which is also Domain Controller, now my whole environment is down :/
I've tried to repair Windows - but there is no restore point, and using command line, I've also tried the sfc /SCANNOW /OFFBOOTDIR /OFFWINDIR, but got error "Windows Resource
Protection could not perform the requested operation"










share|improve this question













I'm encountering such an error after expanding disk (done by Hyper-V) space on virtual machine.



STOP: c000021a {Fatal System Error} The initial session process or system process terminated unexpectedly with a status of (0x00000000) (0xc000012d 0x001003f0).



The virtual server there is Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise Edition, which is also Domain Controller, now my whole environment is down :/
I've tried to repair Windows - but there is no restore point, and using command line, I've also tried the sfc /SCANNOW /OFFBOOTDIR /OFFWINDIR, but got error "Windows Resource
Protection could not perform the requested operation"







dns windows-server-2008-r2 fatal-error hyper-v hard-drive






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Mar 10 '11 at 8:51









christof

124111




124111












  • I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
    – Mike
    Jun 7 '11 at 19:59










  • No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
    – christof
    Jul 11 '11 at 8:10


















  • I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
    – Mike
    Jun 7 '11 at 19:59










  • No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
    – christof
    Jul 11 '11 at 8:10
















I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
– Mike
Jun 7 '11 at 19:59




I hate to be that guy, but have you found an answer to this? I'm in a similar boat but fortunately don't have the whole domain down. Just a Sharepoint provider.
– Mike
Jun 7 '11 at 19:59












No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
– christof
Jul 11 '11 at 8:10




No, I had to rebuild the whole domain. There was no time to investigate more, but would be glad to get the answer. Microsoft support team did not help either.
– christof
Jul 11 '11 at 8:10












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















1














I initially responded to this question to ask if Christof ever found a solution. That's not allowed, so my post was deleted.



I'm back to share that I solved the above problem for myself using a mix-and-match set of backed-up registry files.
I believe the only reason this worked for me is that there had been ZERO changes to the server between the different times the registry files were backed up. Most of the registry files I used in the recovery were from c:windowssystem32configsystemregbak, but the SOFTWARE file had a timestamps too close to the time of my initial failure, so I used one that I had created in windowstmp when I initially began this recovery process. I followed a guide which apparently was deleted but you can find references by searching on site:microsoft.com kb307545, Also make sure you have a backup of the COMPONENTS hive/file.






share|improve this answer























  • Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
    – DrDamnit
    Oct 26 at 15:26











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
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active

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active

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active

oldest

votes









1














I initially responded to this question to ask if Christof ever found a solution. That's not allowed, so my post was deleted.



I'm back to share that I solved the above problem for myself using a mix-and-match set of backed-up registry files.
I believe the only reason this worked for me is that there had been ZERO changes to the server between the different times the registry files were backed up. Most of the registry files I used in the recovery were from c:windowssystem32configsystemregbak, but the SOFTWARE file had a timestamps too close to the time of my initial failure, so I used one that I had created in windowstmp when I initially began this recovery process. I followed a guide which apparently was deleted but you can find references by searching on site:microsoft.com kb307545, Also make sure you have a backup of the COMPONENTS hive/file.






share|improve this answer























  • Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
    – DrDamnit
    Oct 26 at 15:26
















1














I initially responded to this question to ask if Christof ever found a solution. That's not allowed, so my post was deleted.



I'm back to share that I solved the above problem for myself using a mix-and-match set of backed-up registry files.
I believe the only reason this worked for me is that there had been ZERO changes to the server between the different times the registry files were backed up. Most of the registry files I used in the recovery were from c:windowssystem32configsystemregbak, but the SOFTWARE file had a timestamps too close to the time of my initial failure, so I used one that I had created in windowstmp when I initially began this recovery process. I followed a guide which apparently was deleted but you can find references by searching on site:microsoft.com kb307545, Also make sure you have a backup of the COMPONENTS hive/file.






share|improve this answer























  • Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
    – DrDamnit
    Oct 26 at 15:26














1












1








1






I initially responded to this question to ask if Christof ever found a solution. That's not allowed, so my post was deleted.



I'm back to share that I solved the above problem for myself using a mix-and-match set of backed-up registry files.
I believe the only reason this worked for me is that there had been ZERO changes to the server between the different times the registry files were backed up. Most of the registry files I used in the recovery were from c:windowssystem32configsystemregbak, but the SOFTWARE file had a timestamps too close to the time of my initial failure, so I used one that I had created in windowstmp when I initially began this recovery process. I followed a guide which apparently was deleted but you can find references by searching on site:microsoft.com kb307545, Also make sure you have a backup of the COMPONENTS hive/file.






share|improve this answer














I initially responded to this question to ask if Christof ever found a solution. That's not allowed, so my post was deleted.



I'm back to share that I solved the above problem for myself using a mix-and-match set of backed-up registry files.
I believe the only reason this worked for me is that there had been ZERO changes to the server between the different times the registry files were backed up. Most of the registry files I used in the recovery were from c:windowssystem32configsystemregbak, but the SOFTWARE file had a timestamps too close to the time of my initial failure, so I used one that I had created in windowstmp when I initially began this recovery process. I followed a guide which apparently was deleted but you can find references by searching on site:microsoft.com kb307545, Also make sure you have a backup of the COMPONENTS hive/file.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Nov 12 at 17:52









legatoproteus

155




155










answered Jun 8 '11 at 14:03









Mike

714




714












  • Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
    – DrDamnit
    Oct 26 at 15:26


















  • Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
    – DrDamnit
    Oct 26 at 15:26
















Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
– DrDamnit
Oct 26 at 15:26




Link is now a 404. If you can remember what it was, or what to Google, it would be useful if you posted that here.
– DrDamnit
Oct 26 at 15:26


















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