Microsoft says that a known issue will block Windows 10 from booting after trying to restore the system to a restore point created before installing a Windows 10 update.
The issue affects all Windows machines where system protection is turned on and a system restore point has been created prior to installing one or more Windows 10 updates.
When users try to restore the system after the Windows 10 updates have finished installing, the system will not be restored and, instead, "the computer experiences a Stop error (0xc000021a)" and, after restarting the computer, the system will not be able to return to the Windows desktop.
According to Microsoft's support document, this is a known Windows 10 issue and it happens because:
During the system restore process, Windows temporarily stages the restoration of files that are in use. It then saves the information in the registry. When the computer restarts, it completes the staged operation.
In this situation, Windows restores the catalog files and stages the driver .sys
files to be restored when the computer restarts. However, when the computer restarts, Windows loads the existing drivers before it restores the later versions of the drivers. Because the driver versions do not match the versions of the restored catalog files, the restart process stops.
Failed restart recovery
Redmond provides a procedure that can be followed to recover from the failed restart caused by this known issue which requires users to enter the Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE or WinRE) by restarting the computer again after the failure.
To be able to circumvent the restart failures caused by this known issue, users may have to either restart two times in a row or use a hardware restart switch.
Once the Windows Recovery Environment is on the screen, follow these steps:
- Select Troubleshoot > Advanced options > More recovery options > Startup settings, and then select Restart now.
- In the list of startup settings, select Disable driver signature enforcement. (Note: You may have to use the F7 key to select this setting.)
- Allow the startup process to continue. As Windows restarts, the system restore process should resume and finish.
Following the steps listed above will allow users to restore the computer to the restore point chosen before the Stop error (0xc000021a) was triggered.
Avoiding failed restarts
In order to start the System Restore wizard on computers affected by the restart crashes caused by failed system restores, users have to use WinRE instead of the Settings dialog box.
To be able to start this process from the Windows desktop, follow this procedure:
- Select Start > Settings > Update & Security > Recovery.
- Under Advanced options, select Restart now.
- After WinRE starts, select Troubleshoot > Advanced options > System restore.
- Enter your recovery key as it is shown on the screen, and then follow the instructions in the System Restore wizard.
Comments
redalertfiend - 4 years ago
I heard of one person seeing this issue. I just finished installing all updates for my company and home and had no issues at all. I don't use System restore however so I suspect I'll never see anything related to this.
StaffCTO - 4 years ago
Helpful info, but didnt work for me.
I recalled a similar issue from a previous failed Win10 update and decided to try another solution.
From within the recovery console, I opened a command window and turned off Bitlocker.
(manage-bde -unlock D: -RecoveryPassword YOUR-BITLOCKER-RECOVERY-KEY-HERE followed by manage-bde -off C:)
After letting Bitlocker decrypt C: (took about 30 mins - you can check the decrypting progress using manage-bde -status ) I restarted the problem laptop and it completed the remaining 1903 update and started up just fine.
Looks like Bitlocker was preventing it from finishing up the update.
Hope that helps someone!
KC