Windows Stuck On Attempting Repairs

  • Dec 9, 2018 - If you are still stuck in Windows Automatic Repair loop, try the next method. The command prompt commands will attempt to.
  • Windows 7: Stuck in startup repair. How long is too long? Page 1 of 2: 1: 2 06 Aug 2013 #1: Eboz. Windows 7 64. 6 posts Stuck in startup repair. How long is too long? Hello, Windows explorer was not responding yesterday so I had no choice but to hard reboot. Since then life has ceased to exist as i knew it. I cannot get into safe mode.
  1. Laptop Attempting Repairs
FonePaw - Solution - Windows - Windows 10/8 Automatic Repair Loop

Oct 26, 2017  Afterwards, I see a Preparing Automatic Repair - Diagnosing your PC - Attempting repairs. However, on the Attempting repairs, it is stuck on there for hours on end. Almost all of the methods that I see on the internet requires me to go on my Startup Menu to go to Advanced Settings, which isn't possible since I'm stuck on Attempting repairs.

'My HP laptop is sort of getting stuck in what's called automatic repair. I tried to start the PC and it first showed preparing for automatic repair and then said 'automatic repair couldn't repair your PC' with Log file c /windows/system32/logfiles/srt/srttrail.txt. I restarted it several times and ended up with the same 'preparing automatic repair' windows.'

Automatic repair loop usually happens on Windows 10 PC, while automatic repair loop on Windows 8 is also reported by a considerable amount of users. When running into preparing automatic repair loop on Windows 10/8, you may see the following error messages:

  • Windows 10 automatic repair failed. log file c /windows/system32/logfiles/srt/srttrail.txt

  • Windows 10 Your PC did not start correctly

  • bootrec.exe /fixboot access denied



No matter what error you are seeing, you can fix Windows 10/8 automatic repair loop with solutions in this post.

  • How to Fix Automatic Repair Loop in Windows 10/8.1/8
    1. Restart Your PC
    2. Perform Command Prompt
    3. Disable Early Launch Anti-malware Protection
    4. Restore Windows Registry
    5. Delete the Problematic File
    6. System Restore & Data Recovery

What Is Automatic Repair Loop and Why Does It Happen?

Automatic Repair is Windows' own repair tool that is available on Windows 10/8. The tool is designed to launch automatically when a start-up problem comes up on Windows system.

Normally, by running Automatic Repair, Windows diagnoses the start-up problem (missing or corrupt system files, drivers, registry settings, etc.), fix it and then restart the PC automatically. But when Windows didn't shut down properly, it gets into automatic repair loop. For example, if your PC powered off improperly because of a power outage, system crash, data in the registry could be incomplete and corrupt, which lead to the automatic repair loop.

So to prevent automatic repair loop in the future, you may want to avoid force quit Windows.


How to Fix Automatic Repair Loop in Windows 10/8.1/8


1. Restart Your PC

Sometimes, your PC gets stuck at automatic repair loop or is attempting repair forever because Windows thinks that there is a problem with your PC while there is not, so you may just restart the PC.

Step 1 Restart the PC and keep pressing F8 to get it into Windows Boot Manager.



Step 2 Highlight Windows 10 and hit Enter to restart the PC into Windows 10.

Laptop Attempting Repairs


2. Perform Command Prompt

If you see 'your PC did not start correctly', you can go into Boot Options menu and use Command Prompt to get out of automatic repair loop.

Step 1 Click Advanced Options; Choose Troubleshoot > Advanced Options > Command Prompt;



Step 2 Enter the following lines and press Enter after each line to run it:bootrec.exe /rebuildbcd bootrec.exe /fixmbr bootrec.exe /fixboot. Then restart the PC.

If the bootrec.exe command doesn't fix the automatic repair loop, some suggest that you should run chkdsk commands as well.


3. Disable Early Launch Anti-malware Protection

Some users also discover that the Early launch anti-malware protection option is related to the automatic repair loop.

Step 1 Click Advanced Options; Choose to Troubleshoot > Advanced Options > Startup Settings;



Step 2 After the PC restarts, choose to Disable early launch anti-malware protection;

Step 3 Restart your computer again.


4. Restore Windows Registry

When Windows shows 'Windows Automatic Repair couldn't repair your PC', it could indicate a corrupted registry on your computer. Therefore, you can get your Windows out of automatic repair loop by restoring the registry from RegBack directory.

Step 1 Click Advanced Options > Troubleshoot > Advanced Options > Command Prompt;

Step 2 In Command Prompt, enter the following and hit Enter: copy c:windowssystem32configRegBack* c:windowssystem32config;



Step 3 When you are asked whether to overwrite files, type All and press Enter;

Step 4 Finally, type exit and press Enter to exit Command Prompt. Restart the PC.

Stuck


5. Delete the Problematic File

If Windows 10 says 'Windows Automatic Repair couldn't repair your PC' with log file 'c /windows/system32/logfiles/srt/srttrail.txt', it indicates that some files are corrupted and that's why your PC gets into automatic repair loop.

So first, check the SrtTrail.txt and then delete the corrupted files.

Step 1 On the boot menu, selectTroubleshoot > Advanced Options > Command Prompt.

Step 2 Enter the following and hit Enter: C:cd WindowsSystem32LogFilesSrtSrtTrail.txt.

Step 3 You should see something like that: Boot critical file c:windowssystem32driversvsock.sys is corrupt. The vsock.sys belongs to third-party VMWare so it is safe to delete.

Step 4 To delete vsock.sys, enter cd c:windowssystem32driversdel vsock.sys.



Note: It is not always vsock.sys that is corrupted. In your case, it may show other files that are corrupted. So if you get other results rather than vsock.sys, check if the file is core system file; if it is, you are not supposed to delete the file.


6. System Restore

If you have enabled System Protection before and created a restore point, you can perform System Restore to fix Windows 10 /8 automatic repair loop.

Step 1 When you see Advanced Startup Options screen, click Troubleshoot > Advanced options > System Restore.

Step 2 Select a restore point that created before the automatic repair loop. Windows will restore your computer to the original status.

After system restore, the files that are created after the system point will be deleted. If some important files are missing, you can use FonePaw Data Recovery to get back the deleted files, photos, videos, audio, emails.

  • Download and install FonePaw Data Recovery;

    Download

  • Select what you want to recover and the drive from which the files are deleted;

  • Click Scan and FonePaw Data Recovery will scan out all files from the drive, including the deleted one.

  • Tick the files you need and click Recover to save them on your computer.



Do you have other tricks to fix preparing automatic repair loop? Leave your solution below.

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It has been stuck for 10 minutes, but as I do research about this I found out that it can go on forever, whatever the case may be: either the repairing be triggered via automatic startup, or manually via the installation disk, or 'safe mode menu' thing (I don't know the technical name for the last one).

And we all know Microsoft is evil: there's no log showing up, just the black screen with the 'dots circle' animation and an overall-mostly-useless message: 'Attempting repairs'. Not even a percentage of progress.

But what if the attempting is working? If I press the reboot button, does the disk become hardware garbage instantly, or is just Microsoft delaying the possible inevitable failure to access the disk in the first place?

Maybe you guys know from experience, perhaps from any source at all, there has to be a time mark when it starts to attempt all over again, or how much time should it take, so that I can shutdown the computer from the power up button or reboot to try something else.

Fabián
FabiánFabián
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