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The Case of the Printing Failure

The most interesting cases I receive are those that demonstrate a unique troubleshooting technique or uncover an interesting root cause. I received this one recently that has both characteristics. The case opened when a systems administrator got a report from a user that they were unable to print from their computer. There was no visible reaction to clicking on a print dialog or menu item, where normally they saw a dialog stating that the document had been sent to the printer and a tray icon appear representing the active print queue.

The first thing the administrator did was to scan the event logs of the user’s machine, looking for any printing-related events. He quickly came upon two that correlated with the user’s most recent printing attempt:

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It appeared that the Spooler Service started when the user tried to print, but terminated, apparently with an exception (unexpectedly), about a minute later. The question was why?

The administrator turned to Sysinternals Procdump. Procdump is a utility that generates crash dump files of a process when triggers you specify occur. Implemented triggers include CPU usage, virtual memory usage, unhandled exceptions, and process termination. You can use the CPU usage trigger, for example, to capture the state of a process when it hits a short-lived CPU burst, allowing you to look into the process to see the reason for the spike. The administrator guessed that the stack trace of the terminating thread might provide a clue.

He knew that he had some time to get Procdump running after the Spooler Service started, so he launched Notepad, tried to print, and then executed Procdump with the –e option and the name of the Spooler Service process (Spoolsv) to have Procdump wait until the service exited before writing the dump file. A few seconds later Procdump reported that it had completed the job and saved a dump file:

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He opened the dump in Windbg and executed the ‘k’ command, which has Windbg dump the stack of the thread that caused the crash. The stack trace, which essentially lists a record of the function calls executed before the crash, showed that the process died in a sequence of calls that included several Ldr functions, including LdrpLoadDll:

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A web search revealed that LdrpLoadDll is a function related to the system’s DLL loader. Suspecting that the process was dying either because it couldn’t find a DLL it was looking for or was loading an incorrect DLL, he turned to Process Monitor, which would enable him to see the process’s DLL-related file system activity. He started Process Monitor, attempted to print again, and then stopped the capture. Working his way from the end of the trace back to the beginning, he scanned for hints of the root cause. Shortly before Spoolsvc exited, he saw it searching unsuccessfully for Localspl.dll in various directories on the system:

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He assumed that the DLL was supposed to be there. When he looked at an another identically configured Windows XP system on his network, he found Localspl.dll in the \Windows\System32 directory, but not on the system experiencing the problem:

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The file’s description reported it to be the Local Spooler DLL, which explained the Spooler’s inability to support printing operations. After he copied the file from the working system, he was able to print successfully.

As far as the user was concerned, the case was closed and he was able to get back to work, but the administrator was left with the question of what had happened to the original DLL. Another web search turned up forum posts from others that had experienced the same problem. One post in particular described the exact symptoms he’d seen, including the event log entries, suggested the same fix of copying Localspl.dll from another system, and blamed uninstallers of third-party print and fax software for incorrectly deleting Localspl.dll:

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He couldn’t say for certain that was the case for this particular system because the end user didn’t remember uninstalling printing or fax software, but the post had at least given him a plausible theory to replace the unease he would have been left with that files were mysteriously being deleted from his systems. He could now close the case thanks to Procdump and Process Monitor.

If you solve an interesting case with Sysinternals tools, please send me screenshots (.PNG preferred) and log files so that I can share them with others in this blog and my presentations.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    January 01, 2003
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    Impressive troubleshooting. That guy deserves a raise. Most people I talk to (and quite possibly myself) would have just rebuilt the system and called it a day. Low tech but efficient.

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    I'm curious about the near throwaway mention in the forum post screenshot: why wouldn't System File Protection restore the deleted system file; and why didn't SFC note its absence?

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    Thanks Mark, great article as always. Procdump ought my attention just for a few days a good tool when processes misbehaves.

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    SFC as far as i understand, is only checking existing files. It doesn't have a list of system files, that should be on system.

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    Nice job! There is no localspl.dll in the screenshot either, though.

  • Anonymous
    April 26, 2010
    Yeah, why System File Protection didn't helped? Then... How does it work?

  • Anonymous
    April 27, 2010
    yeah, that "System File Protection" thing also could not protect "svchost.exe" from being deleted erronously by McAffee! Mysterious!

  • Anonymous
    April 27, 2010
    Reminds me that I need to debug my wifes computer: on about every 3rd boot the touchpad does not work (reboot fixes), on around every 10th boot touchpad and keyboard don't work (suspend and wakeup fixes keyboard, but not touchpad). No messages in the event log. Probably just a messy touchpad driver from Fujitsu-Siemens, but installing the most recent did not change much. When I got time....

  • Anonymous
    April 27, 2010
    Nice find, I solve lots of interesting problems with Process Monitor and Process Explorer, but I never save pictures etc. I shall do from now on!

  • Anonymous
    April 27, 2010
    impressive! who is this guy, didn't he want the name credit? and a good word to Yuval Sinai, a well known MVP that prove his excellence time after time :)

  • Anonymous
    April 27, 2010
    Thanks Mark for this wonderful piece of information.

  • Anonymous
    April 28, 2010
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 28, 2010
    I agree that this is a worrying lacuna in SFC's remit - it should do more than check versions, or at least flag up expected files that are missing.

  • Anonymous
    May 01, 2010
    SFC is designed for compatability with the offending programs i.e. it lets the programs go through with their system-altering deletions/moves/editing... and then silently restores the file a short time after. this is great for dealing with j.random.1990's app that wants to edit svchost for it's own (no longer required) reasons... not so great when considering an antivirus, as when SFC restores the file:

  • the antivirus will just move it again
  • SFC will have alerted the antivirus to the existence of the backup file, which it'll also move basically, SFC is a defence against accidental altering of system files, not deliberate... assuming svchost.exe is SFC-protected (I'd assume so)
  • Anonymous
    May 03, 2010
    Wouldn't it make life a lot simpler if the print spooler process would somehow report that it could not find the DLL in the event log? This looks like a 'design' issue to me.

  • Anonymous
    May 05, 2010
    Johan: You are so right. IME, 99.8% of the time error messages to the user are useless. "File not found" - which file, for doing what? "General failure reading disk" - huh!

  • Anonymous
    May 05, 2010
    Johan: I agree, error messages usually only notify you of the problem, rarely do they help understand or solve the problem.  However, it's not always because the developers are idiots or don't care, it's hard problem to solve.  When a executable has static links to DLLs that are missing, the EXE doesn't get a chance to write a custom error message because it never gets loaded by the OS or given a chance to run.  The developer needs to write extra code to dynamically link to every DLL that might be used and load them separately and handle logging for each one.  I'm not saying they shouldn't write the extra code, I think they should, I'm just explaining that it's not as simple as taking an extra 15 seconds to type a more informative error message.

  • Anonymous
    May 06, 2010
    Very nice information. I was searching for a document on how to troubleshoot my problem with printisolationhost.exe on Windows 2008 R2. Sometimes this process is running twice and consuming each 25% of the CPU. So the Procdump tool might help me in this case. I will look into it first thing tomorrow. When it does, I will surly send you the details! Gr Sander

  • Anonymous
    May 07, 2010
    Process Monitor is absolute gold and has solved so many weird problems for me. Clovis' first comment about HP is sadly very true in my experience.  No end of bizarre problems.

  • Anonymous
    May 31, 2010
    There seems to be some confusion over SFC and system file protection. The former you must run manually ("sfc /scannow") and it has a list of files (you can see the list - it's in an ascii file in the system32 directory somewhere from memory) that it looks for. If it finds any file on the list has been altered from original, it grabs a copy from the dllcache or Windows CD and puts it in place. The list of files it has is not exhaustive, so I'm not surprised the dll in this case wasn't in the list. I find a repair install fixes a lot of these sorts of issues when SFC doesn't though. System file protection is a different feature. It's the one that sits in the background and automatically replaces files that are deleted/modified a few seconds after the change.

  • Anonymous
    June 04, 2010
    Thanks for sharing this post Mark. It is really helpful.

  • Anonymous
    June 27, 2010
    Thanks for the information.  I wish I would have stumbled upon this yesterday! I had a similar issue and spent several hours trying to resolve it.  

  • Anonymous
    June 29, 2010
    I'm amazed at your knowlege and your willingness to share it. Unfortuanately, I usually uninstall the printer program and drivers, then reinstall to remedy the printing problems. Now, I have more tools to fix the problem, thanks to you. Glen Woodfin

  • Anonymous
    September 13, 2010
    Amazing blog. My printer HP laserjet 2100tn wasn't working properly on Wi 7 . The driver available on HP website also didnt work. However, I find answer here that install Laserjet 2200 driver instead of 2100 from Windows system and it worked fine. Thanks guys!!!

  • Anonymous
    December 15, 2010
    I had a customer with a 2100n, Word took 5 mins. to open a document, they complained about the network. After some troubleshooting it turned out that the HP printerdriver was buggy, when I changed printerproperties on the server the clients would have the problem.

  • Anonymous
    April 23, 2011
    If we run ProcDump on system while say the program is crashing, before explorer or anything is running, is there a way to Schedule ProcDump to run during the starting phase of the system while its running so it can generate the dmp file? Or will running it as he did during system already running , automatically schedule it to dmp file whenever the process we are monitoring even if we reboot system after?