Issue deploying ConfigMgr SP2 - NTFS Streams

Published Friday, November 27, 2009 3:27 PM

Had an interesting problem occur during an ConfigMgr SP1 to SP2 upgrade recently.

During the upgrade process everything looked fine, all the way in to the reinstallation of the components by Site Component Manager. However the Reporting Point reinstallation seemed to be taking longer than it normally does. Left alone it’ll eventually time out, and Site Component Manager does a retry. This will continue to loop in this fashion leaving you with an incomplete SP2 upgrade.

Since Windows XP SP2, when a file is downloaded from the Internet on to an NTFS volume, an Alternative Data Stream is associated with the file called Zone.Identifier, the only exception seems to be if the site you are downloading from is in the Trusted Zone. This is used to control a security warning prompt that will appear asking if you still want to run the executable before it launches. For a workstation that has zone editing locked down by Group Policy you have no control over which zones are trusted and which are not, and in my case all are treated as un-trusted.

What happened is that the SITECOMP.EXE process attempted to load REPORTINGINSTALL.EXE in to memory, and this prompt was generated but it didn’t appear in the console session so I had no idea it was being displayed and the execution of the process was being blocked.

Eventually SITECOMP times out the installation of the Reporting Services installation and tries again. This will eventually lead to many copies of REPORTINGINSTALL.EXE appearing in the systems process list.

This is a hard one to troubleshoot, as there is really no handle posting in logs or the Event Log regarding why the process failed to launch as it hasn’t failed to launch, its waiting for a prompt that you’ll never see to be acknowledged.

To resolve this you need to download the SysInternals STREAMS.EXE tool and strip out the Alternative Data Streams.

<a href=http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897440.aspx">Streams by Mark Russinovich</a>

Open a CMD prompt, navigate to the folder containing the SP2 installation and run the following:

Streams.exe –s –d *.* > c:\deletedstreams.txt

I log the output of streams for future reference. Take a look at c:\deletedstreams.txt to see if any where deleted.

Here is an example of the output from a run through the SP2 installation kit using streams.exe:

Streams v1.56 - Enumerate alternate NTFS data streams

Copyright (C) 1999-2007 Mark Russinovich

Sysinternals - www.sysinternals.com

F:\SOURCEFOLDER\ConfigMgr SP2\ConfigMgr07SP2Upgrade_RTM_ENU\autorun.inf:

   Deleted :Zone.Identifier:$DATA

F:\SOURCEFOLDER\ConfigMgr SP2\ConfigMgr07SP2Upgrade_RTM_ENU\ConfigMgr07SP2Readme.htm:

   Deleted :Zone.Identifier:$DATA

F:\SOURCEFOLDER\ConfigMgr SP2\ConfigMgr07SP2Upgrade_RTM_ENU\splash.hta:

   Deleted :Zone.Identifier:$DATA

F:\SOURCEFOLDER\ConfigMgr SP2\ConfigMgr07SP2Upgrade_RTM_ENU\SMSSETUP\BIN\I386\setup.exe:

   Deleted :Zone.Identifier:$DATA

F:\SOURCEFOLDER\ConfigMgr SP2\ConfigMgr07SP2Upgrade_RTM_ENU\SMSSETUP\BIN\I386\reportinginstall.exe:

   Deleted :Zone.Identifier:$DATA

I owe a shout out to two people that helped on this, Initially Andrew Maidens from MS CSS based in Reading for originally noticing this a while back on another unrelated case, and Chris Rothwell for pointing out the similarities and pointing the investigating in the right direction.

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