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List of possible return codes from .NET Framework 2.0 setup

A few weeks ago I posted a list of supported command line switches for the new setup wrapper that is used to install the .NET Framework 2.0 and other products in the Visual Studio 2005 family. If you are deploying the .NET Framework 2.0 as part of another setup package, the command line parameters are only one piece of the puzzle. It is also useful to listen to the return codes passed back by the setup package in order to determine if .NET Framework 2.0 setup succeeded or failed.

In general, the return code 0 indicates success, the code 3010 indicates success with a reboot required, and anything else indicates failure.

Here is a list of other return codes that could be generated by the .NET Framework 2.0 setup wrapper along with descriptions of what they mean:

  • 0x001000 (4096) - Invalid command line parameter(s)
  • 0x001001 (4097) - Administrator provileges are required to run setup
  • 0x001002 (4098) - Installation of Windows Installer failed (this is a legacy return code that is not used since we stopped bootstrapping Windows Installer as a part of the .NET Framework setup during the 2.0 product cycle)
  • 0x001003 (4099) - Windows Installer is not configured properly on the machine
  • 0x001004 (4100) - CreateMutex failed
  • 0x001005 (4101) - Another instance of setup is already running
  • 0x001006 (4102) - Cannot open the MSI database
  • 0x001007 (4103) - Cannot read from the MSI database
  • 0x00100F (4111) - Cannot retrieve the %temp% directory
  • 0x001011 (4113) - Beta components have been detected on the machine that must be uninstalled before installation can proceed
  • 0x001013 (4115) - The length of the %temp% path is too long
  • 0x001014 (4116) - The length of the source path too long
  • 0x001016 (4118) - Failed to create or write to the log file
  • 0x001017 (4119) - The Windows Installer service is not responding to Service Control requests and the system requires a reboot in order to continue
  • 0x001018 (4120) - An internal error occured while trying to initialize the Windows Installer service
  • 0x001019 (4121) - One or more prerequisites for this product is missing
  • 0x00101A (4122) - The product does not support installing on the current operating system type
  • 0x00101B (4123) - The product is already installed as an operating system component (the .NET Framework 2.0 is an OS component on Windows Vista and installing the MSI-based setup is blocked and will return this error in silent mode)
  • 0x00101C (4124) - Error processing the install.ini file (there is either a syntax error or a missing mandatory entry)
  • 0x001FFF (8191) - Setup failure - unknown reason (all errors not covered above are grouped into this bucket)
  • 0x002000 (8192) - Reboot is required

Here are some other error codes that could be returned by the .NET Framework 2.0 setup wrapper, but that are actually generated by Windows Installer and not by the code for the setup wrapper itself:

  • 0x00000641 (1601) - The Windows Installer service could not be accessed
  • 0x00000642 (1602) - The user cancelled setup. Installation cannot proceed
  • 0x00000643 (1603) - Fatal error during installation (this error is returned if any custom action fails within an MSI-based setup for example)
  • 0x00000656 (1622) - Error opening Windows Installer log file. Verify that the log file location exists and is writable.
  • 0x00000661 (1633) - This installation package is not supported on this platform

Please note that I do not list any generic Win32 error codes here. You can use a tool such as errlook.exe (which ships in %ProgramFiles%\Microsoft Visual Studio 8\Common7\Tools if you have VS 2005 installed) or err.exe to translate Win32 error codes.

<update date="12/12/2005"> Added some common Windows Installer error codes to the list </update>

Comments

  • Anonymous
    December 15, 2005
    Hi Aaron

    I just happened upon this entry when reading about Orca, and had been suffering the 0x1011 error when Microsoft Update attempted to install .NET Framework 2.0.

    The error description from MU doesn't offer any useful information, and Googling shows lots of people with the same problem. Of course since I had VS2005 Beta 2 installed the problem now makes sense...

    It would be great if the help information at WU/MU could be updated to note the meaning of 0x1011, and to delete the beta/upgrade VS2005 if that's the issue. If I can find a WU blog I'll post this there too...

    Alan

  • Anonymous
    December 15, 2005
    Hi Alanjmcf - This is unfortunately a limitation in how Microsoft Update and Windows Update communicates failures when installing packages. When something fails to install via MU or WU, my first recommendation is always to run the package again outside of MU/WU so that the UI will display and you have a better chance of seeing error messages. For the beta products case, the .NET Framework UI shows a very clear message indicating what to do, but unfortunately all of that UI has to be suppressed when installing via MU/WU so it makes it harder to discover the true root cause of the install failure.

  • Anonymous
    February 15, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    February 15, 2006
    Hi Bill - Visual Studio installs several products behind the scenes, so it is possible that there is still some remaining beta software on your system.  If you download the standalone .NET Framework 2.0 package from http://msdn.microsoft.com/netframework/downloads/updates/ and run it directly (instead of running it from Windows Update), the setup UI should tell you exactly what additional beta products need to be removed.

  • Anonymous
    February 15, 2006
    Question
    I noticed that the .NET Framework 2.0 is being offered on Windows Update the last time I checked...

  • Anonymous
    April 11, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    April 30, 2006
    I was talking to a couple of Microsoft product teams a couple of weeks ago.&amp;nbsp; They are trying to...

  • Anonymous
    July 02, 2006
    I have gotten several questions in the past from customers who need to install the .NET Framework 2.0...

  • Anonymous
    July 10, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    August 10, 2006
    A bug was discovered recently in the x64&amp;nbsp;.NET Framework 2.0 language pack setups.&amp;nbsp; This bug...

  • Anonymous
    August 27, 2006
    PingBack from http://blogs.msdn.com/astebner/articles/454956.aspx

  • Anonymous
    August 31, 2006
    How to detect old versions when deploying the .NET Framework 3.0 (formerly WinFX) Via Aaron Stebner's

  • Anonymous
    October 21, 2006
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    November 28, 2006
    A while back, I posted a list of possible return codes for the .NET Framework 2.0 . I recently found

  • Anonymous
    July 18, 2007
    The comment has been removed

  • Anonymous
    December 06, 2007
    PingBack from http://newyear2006.wordpress.com/2007/01/31/errorcodes-bei-installation-des-net-framework-20-oder-30/