Where I live it’s stone fruit season – Peaches and plums are sweet and ripe. Where we ALL live around the world, it’s that time of the month where Red
[See the full post at: June updates are out]
Susan Bradley Patch Lady
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Home » Forums » Newsletter and Homepage topics » June updates are out
Where I live it’s stone fruit season – Peaches and plums are sweet and ripe. Where we ALL live around the world, it’s that time of the month where Red
[See the full post at: June updates are out]
Susan Bradley Patch Lady
AKB 2000003 has been updated for Group B Win7 (ESU) and Win8.1 on June 14, 2022.
There is a Security-only Update for those with Win7 ESU subscriptions.
There is no June. IE11 CU for Win7 .
June Rollup KB5014748 Download 32-bit or 64-bit for those with Win7 ESU subscriptions.
You must have at least the August 2020 Servicing Stack KB4570673 previously installed to receive these updates).
There is a March 2022 Servicing Stack KB5011649 – Download 32-bit or 64-bit for those with Win7 ESU subscriptions.
There is a revised Licensing Preparation Package KB4575903 dated 7/29/2020 for Win7 ESU subscriptions, if you need it. You will need a year-3 ESU license.
There are .NET Framework updates listed for Win7. See #2453333.
Windows 11 Pro x64 (Beta Test)
These three updates installed using WuMgr without error and rebooted without error.
Updated my main driver Win8.1 with no problems.
KB5014738 Rollup, KB5014025 .NET Framework Rollup, MSRT
Added with no problems:
x3 Win10 Pro 21H2 KB5014699CU to Build 19044.1766, .NET Framework 3.5/4.8 KB5013887, MSRT
x1 (more) Win8.1 KB5014738 Rollup, KB5014025 .NET Framework Rollup, MSRT
x2 Win7 Pro KB5014748 Rollup, KB5014631 .NET Framework 4.8
Updated my Test tell XPS8700. Hung on reboot at the Dell Logo. Turned off via power button. Turned back on and finished the update and booted properly. Installed updates shows today’s cumulative update for 21H2.
Windows 10 Pro
KB5013887 Cumulative Update for .NET Framework 3.5 and 4.8 for Windows 10 Version 21H2 for x64
KB5014699 Cumulative Update for Windows 10 Version 21H2 for x64-based Systems
Malicious Software Removal Tool
KB5014697 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 for x64-based Systems
Malicious Software Removal Tool
No hiccups on either side of my dual boot.
Win 10 Pro 21H2 build 19044.1706 Win Feature Pack 120.2212.4170.0
Ran winshowhide this morning, only showed ‘KB5013942’? I installed that on May 28, it shows installed in control panel? I hid it. Nothing listed as pending in Windows Update. Anomaly?
*no Folina reg tweaks done.
Just ran winshowhide again, now shows KB5014699 & 890830. I hid until all clear. ( No framework updates listed for 3.5-4.8.)
HP Win11 64 pro laptop
I installed May update 6/4 and paused updates till 7/11. A few days ago, HP updates to sound card and processor or some such were offered and I went with them. The HP update process must have removed the pause because today this showed up: July 2022-06 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 for x64-based Systems (KB5014697) I went ahead and installed with no negative side effects seen and noted in calendar to pause updates in early July.
The takeaway is to not install PC specific updates until the monthly install cycle.
Windows 11 Pro 22000.739
2022-06 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 for x64-based Systems (KB5014697)
Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool x64 – v5.102 (KB890830)
2022-06 .NET Core 3.1.26 Security Update for x64 Client (KB5015424)
2022-06 .NET 6.0.6 Security Update for x64 Client (KB5015429)
No problems.
--Joe
Zero day Follina and Dogpatch has been fixed
According to Neowin DogWalk hasn’t been fixed.
To add to this, 0patch has now made their previously free micropatch for Follina issued on June 1, 2022 available only to Pro and Enterprise users.
Specifically,
[Update 15/6/2022: Microsoft issued an official patch for this vulnerability. They implemented functionally the same security check in msdt.exe as we had in sdiagnhost.exe, namely checking for the presence of “$(” in the user-provided path. With official patches being available, our micropatches for this vulnerability are no longer free but require PRO or Enterprise license.]
The free micropatch issued for Dogwalk by 0patch on June 7, 2022 remains free (at least for the time being).
Let me be more specific:
I was under the impression the monthly LCU for v1607 contains the .NET updates for every version except NET 4.8. Is this, in fact, correct?
I say this because when you select the .NET Framework 3.5, 4.6.2, 4.7, 4.7.1, 4.7.2 KB articles and catalog entries on the .NET Framework Security and Quality Rollup Updates website, the link always takes you to v1607’s monthly LCU page. This is not the case when you select the KB articles and catalog entries for .NET Framework 4.8.
Hi Susan:
The following June 2022 Patch Tuesday updates were installed successfully on my Win 10 Pro v21H2 laptop by Windows Update and I haven’t noticed any negative effects so far:
I didn’t receive the KB5013887 Cumulative Update for .NET Framework 3.5 and 4.8 for Windows 10 but that’s expected. I have my Win 10 Pro Local Group Policy Editor setting at Computer Configuration | Administrative Templates | Windows Components| Windows Update | Windows Update for Business | Select When Preview Builds and Feature Updates Are Received enabled and set to Semi-Annual so Windows Update will only deliver a stable .NET Framework update to my machine if it includes a security patch.
———–
Dell Inspiron 5584 * 64-bit Win 10 Pro v21H2 build 19044.1706 * Firefox v101.0.1 * Microsoft Defender v4.18.2203.5-1.1.19200.6 * Malwarebytes Premium v4.5.10.200-1.0.1702 * Macrium Reflect Free v8.0.6758
Unable to connect to internet when using Wi-Fi hotspot feature
After installing KB5014697, Windows devices might be unable use the Wi-Fi hotspot feature. When attempting to use the hotspot feature, the host device might lose the connection to the internet after a client device connects.
Workaround: To mitigate the issue and restore internet access on the host device, you can disable the Wi-Fi hotspot feature. For instructions, please see Use your Windows PC as a mobile hotspot.
Next steps: We are presently investigating and will provide an update in an upcoming release.
Affected platforms:
Client: Windows 11, version 21H2; Windows 10, version 21H2; Windows 10, version 21H1; Windows 10, version 20H2; Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2019; Windows 10 Enterprise LTSC 2016; Windows 10 Enterprise 2015 LTSB; Windows 8.1; Windows 7 SP1
Server: Windows Server 2022; Windows Server, version 20H2; Windows Server 2019; Windows Server 2016; Windows Server 2012 R2; Windows Server 2012; Windows Server 2008 R2 SP1; Windows Server 2008 SP2..
June updates break Microsoft 365 and AAD sign in on ARM devices
After installing this update on a Windows Arm-based device, you might be unable to sign in using Azure Active Directory (AAD). Apps and services that use Azure Active Directory to sign in might also be affected. Some scenarios that might be affected are VPN connections, Microsoft Teams, Microsoft OneDrive, and Microsoft Outlook.
Note This issue only affects Windows devices that use Arm processors.
I installed KB5014697 fine
but for KB5007651 I get
“Installing updates failed: Internal Error.” 0x80070643 – that says something about re-installing .NET runtime…
Using WuMgr.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Hi kris!
I googled the KB number of your errant update, and it’s actually an update for the Windows Security Platform, not your .net framework or other .net installation.
Also, turns out that a lot of other folks have had the same problem as you, since there are ten pages on the Microsoft answers forum about it!
Hi
From an internet search on KB5007651:
– Seems like this Update error is been reported from Windows 11.
– I am on Windows 10 Home and both of my devices have been patched with the 14 June 2022 CU KB5014699 and CU KB5013887 .Net Frameworks but there was no KB5007651 offered.
– The KB5007651 update is not listed in the Microsoft Update Catalogue.
– There are various hit-and-miss fixes been tried and from this thread :
Microsoft Community – Update for Windows Security platform – KB5007651 (Version 1.0.2109.27002)
————————————————————————-
https://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/all/update-for-windows-security-platform-kb5007651/da66d02d-cf18-4a43-ac14-133a69cdc749
One of the mentioned fix that seems to work for some is from poster Shakusky:
“Simply access the Windows Security app settings (right-click on Windows Security in the Start Menu). Once there, hit “Repair” and “Reset”. Then, attempt the Windows update again. Worked for me!”
May be worth a try.
HTH.
I failed to mention above in post 2454387 that Googling the KB number also produced NO hits that go to a Microsoft-authored KB article. That’s unusual for Googling a KB number, as a direct reference to a Microsoft KB article is usually in one of the first four or five hits.
Makes me think that they may have pulled the update silently to fix it. But if they did, why are some folks reporting that they’ve been able to finally download and successfully install it after several tries?
I tried to force it to download again and I believe it did that, but it failed again. With WuMgr, I don’t know how to identify it and delete it – the stuff in that folder windows/softwaredistribution/download just has a bunch of numbers and letters for names.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
🙁
Some folks in that Answers forum reported it just suddenly worked after several tries, PFM (pure (fantastic) magic).
There are a couple of possible solutions mentioned on the following ElevenForums page about this same issue. It’s an active page that’s been updated while I’ve been typing this post, so feel free to read it completely before deciding if you want to take any suggestions for action or just wait it out.
https://www.elevenforum.com/t/security-platform-kb5007651-error-0x80070643.7110/
One suggestion involves updating the definitions for WD from within WD then trying the update again. The premise for this solution is that the definitions are corrupted thus leading to the update not installing.
Another proposed solution involves shutting down WD’s real time protection and then trying to install the update. To temporarily shut down the real time protection, go into WD and click on Virus & threat protection. Now, under Virus & threat protection settings, there should be an item that says “Manage settings”. Click it, and that will bring up the settings page for WD’s protection suite, and the first item should be labeled Real time protection with a slider next to it. Click that slider to turn off the protection. Now, while it’s off, try to install the patch and see if it succeeds. If it does succeed, please immediately go back and turn on the Real- time protection. If the update needs a reboot, I’d turn on the real-time protection and see if that causes any problems with your system before rebooting.
OK, sounds like it’s time to hide it with WuMgr. IIRC, there is a way to hide an update using WuMgr, but since I don’t use it (I use wushowhide), I can’t say just how to do that with WuMgr.
I have read of folks here being able to hide individual updates with WuMgr so I know it can be done.
Folks have been told to try running sfc /scannow followed by a trio of dism commands to try and fix any unknown issues with their Windows servicing stack and related system files, but those folks reported back consistently that those commands didn’t work towards getting the patch installed successfully either. In other words, they spent the time to run the commands, which ran to completion, but afterwards they were still unsuccessful in installing the patch.
yeah. I read the elevenforum thing but no help. I looked at the 1st 2 pages od the MS thing and did the
sfc /scannow
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /ScanHealth
Dism /Online /Cleanup-Image /CheckHealth
DISM /Online /Cleanup-image /RestoreHealth
After the command is executed, restart the computer, and then execute the following command again:
sfc /scannow
thing – the first time if found and corrected errors, everything else showed no errors. But still no joy. I will hide it.
Many thanks all!
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Thanks but what is/ how do I do “repair install over the top”?
EDIT: Oh.
Note – on one of those threads there was a person who kept stressing that they did a separate new build and it failed on that.
What about just hiding/forgetting about it for this month?
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Please read the post by “urfzvrfm” above. I’ve read the MS answers thread linked to in the post above, and the mentioned solution sounds like it may very well work for you.
The posters in that thread from the answers forum have both WD and other AV solutions on their machines. The update is for the Windows Security Platform, which, I believe, is the core component of your installation of WD.
If you decide to read through the entire thread, it’s ten pages (maybe more by now) but there are several references to the solution mentioned by “urfzvrfm” above.
Hi everyone,
I hope all is well.
Just to let you know, I updated all of the following systems without issues this month to the June 2022 updates and I can still print too:
One minor point was one of my Windows 8.1 64 bit systems seemed to wait 5 minutes after rebooting to install the updates. The initial screen “Configuring Windows updates: 100% completed” stayed there for about 5 minutes and then loaded into Windows fine. The system is working fine since. My other almost identical system didn’t do this.
I hope this helps. Thanks.
Digital oil change on three Win8.1 Pro x64 devices:
kb5014738 SMQR, kb5014025 .NET4.8 rollup sans the heartbeat MSRT, smooth running after 4+ days.
W10 Pro 21H2 on two devices: (x86 & x64)
kb5014699CU up to build 19044.1766 with NET4.8 kb5013887 on two devices after 4 days, no issues.
Win7 ESUb kb5014748 SMQR, kb5014631 .NET4.8 all good.
Componentstores flushed and filters changed with no SFC violations.
see this
no thanks!
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Here’s a video on how to do a repair install (also called an “in-place” repair/update.)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MwkoVF2gtt8
It allows you to keep all your installed apps and features while updating/repairing all the Windows components and “normally” resolves issues being caused by corrupt/defective Windows components.
The steps for a repair install are the same whether Windows 10 or Windows 11 operating system.
Addendum:
These two links are for downloading Windows 10 or Windows 11 operating system respectively:
haha – so the joke’s on me. I wasted a half hour plus doing that repair install thing.
click to install 7651.
you’ll never guess what happened!!!!!!!!
It failed.
one of the byproducts is that I lose the grub boot to Mint.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
OK, after all you’ve done/tried/been through, it’s time to hide the update using WuMgr. Period!
Although I don’t use it, there are plenty of folks around here who do, so I suspect that it’ll be easy to find out just which steps you have to take with WuMgr to hide the miscreant update until MS fixes it.
I did some more digging this morning and found a thread on another site where one person had success installing the update after completely resetting the Windows Update stack, but several others who tried the WU stack reset but who then experienced another failure of the update to install afterwards. Like you said above, a big waste of time.
IF you’d like to try completely resetting the WU stack, there IS help available here, and I’ve also seen @PKCano guide folks through a complete reset of the WU stack, which involves either renaming or deleting some of the stuff in the Windows>SoftwareDistribution folder as well as other steps that need to be performed in the proper order. (I used > instead of a back slash for the path because the site occasionally has a problem showing the slashes properly).
This process is different than the one in AKB2000013, in that the process in the AKB is for successfully hiding an update that has appeared in WU that you don’t want to install right now and you don’t want it to be installed by mistake.
I do not believe it is a windows update stack problem. I believe it is something else and these few successes we are seeing are serendipity.
Hiding things with WuMgr is not very complicated – click on item, click on eye with line through it. Done. I will NOT apply any June fix but will wait till just before July updates.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
followup: I am back where I was before June updates. and before recover-install.
Since it fails on certain computers I wonder if it isn’t the old-hardware thing, or the like, showing up.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Do both the June monthly update and the errant update show up in WuMgr as available but hidden?
Just as an FYI, I have noticed that there seem to be no complaints about this errant patch until about the middle or last half of May, so I’m thinking that perhaps the May update made changes to the servicing stack that the errant update wasn’t programmed to work with.
In other words, perhaps the errant update was written to work with the servicing stack that was current prior to the servicing stack update contained in the May monthly update.
One other possibility for the lack of complaints earlier than mid to late May is that the update wasn’t released until the mid to late May time frame in the first place. Hard to find that out, though, because there’s no reference to any KB article written about the release.
Basically grasping at straws now.
Do both the June monthly update and the errant update show up in WuMgr as available but hidden?
Just as an FYI, I have noticed that there seem to be no complaints about this errant patch until about the middle or last half of May, so I’m thinking that perhaps the May update made changes to the servicing stack that the errant update wasn’t programmed to work with.
In other words, perhaps the errant update was written to work with the servicing stack that was current prior to the servicing stack update contained in the May monthly update.
One other possibility for the lack of complaints earlier than mid to late May is that the update wasn’t released until the mid to late May time frame in the first place. Hard to find that out, though, because there’s no reference to any KB article written about the release.
Basically grasping at straws now.
- This reply was modified 11 months, 3 weeks ago by
Bob99.
nothing is hidden in WuMgr unless I specifically click on it and hide it.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
These posts are way out of order now – one answer to this is 3 posts up as a reply.
repeat from above:
I do not believe it is a windows update stack problem. I believe it is something else and these few successes we are seeing are serendipity.
Hiding things with WuMgr is not very complicated – click on item, click on eye with line through it. Done.
I will NOT apply any June fix but will wait till just before July updates.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
I came back from a two week break to find that one of our clients was having VPN issues. They have a Server 2022 VM running RAS for SSTP access. The problem was that when someone connected to the VPN, the entire VM would stop responding shortly afterwards and need a hard reset. Uninstalling KB5014678 works around the issue and gets it working again. I can’t find anything online to suggest if this is an issue, although I wouldn’t imagine that many people are using RAS on Server 2022.
This has been reported on AskWoody.
See https://www.askwoody.com/forums/topic/master-patch-list-for-june-14-2022-too-early-to-patch-yet/#post-2454866
No third-party VPN client. I was able to replicate the issue myself with vanilla Windows 11. Connecting to the VPN and running ‘net use’ on a file share was enough to lock up the VM hosting RAS. It is configured as a NAT router and from the Bleeping Computer article it seems that has a bearing on whether you’re affected or not.
I was just checking the recommendation for the June 22 updates (after Jun 28th) and couldn’t quite remember what “deferred to” date I had set on one of my 21H2 PCs. When I accidentally triggered “Resume Updates” I groaned and wondered if there was anything I could do. A few seconds later I clicked on the “defer updates” link, and it allowed me to defer updates for 7 days. I also discovered that I could go into advanced options and defer updates further.
I was able to repeat this on 2 other 21H2 PCs, but since I did not pause for a few seconds, it took 4 or 5 clicks to work in each case.
It does not appear that any downloads continued. It could be that Windows registers the “resume updates” but then allows a near immediate reset before it connects with the download server and anything actually begins downloading.
If true, talk about a workaround!
Just for fun I checked WuMgr again.
The wayward 7651 was no longer in “hidden” – was no longer anywhere. Been removed, I guess.
However 14697 and 14668(preview) are both listed as being 121.94GB – that’s right – gigabytes. Without realizing that I clicked on 14697 and apparently it dutifully tried to get that 121.94GB. When I realized that, of course, I cancelled it.
But, wondering what’s up with those sizes?
EDIT: Never mind – it took maybe 8-10min but installed fine (14697). So size reported incorrectly. So is that the fault of WuMgr, MS, or Windows Update?
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Never mind – it took maybe 8-10min but installed fine (14697). So size reported incorrectly. So is that the fault of WuMgr, MS, or Windows Update?
Hi krism:
According to the Microsoft Update Catalog KB5014697 (2022-06 Cumulative Update for Windows 11 for x64-based Systems, last updated 14-Jun-2022) is only 274.4 MB (not GB), and the details show this update has now been superseded (replaced) by the 276.2 MB KB5014668 (2022-06 Cumulative Update Preview for Windows 11 for x64-based Systems, last updated 23-Jun-2022).
Your image in post # 2456965 shows that WuMgr did not explicitly label KB5014668 as a Preview build. Out of curiosity, is there a setting in WuMgr that can be enabled to prevent Week C/D Preview builds from being offered as available updates? I use Windows Update to manage updates on my Win 10 Pro machine and used the local group policy editor (Computer Configuration | Administrative Templates | Windows Components| Windows Update | Windows Update for Business | Select When Preview Builds and Feature Updates Are Received is enabled and set to Semi-Annual) to do this.
—————
Dell Inspiron 5584 * 64-bit Win 10 Pro v21H2 build 19044.1766 * Firefox v101.0.1 * Microsoft Defender v4.18.2205.7-1.1.19300.2 * Malwarebytes Premium v4.5.10.200-1.0.1702 * Macrium Reflect Free v8.0.6758
see
I don’t know if there’s any way to stop being shown previews, but I wouldn’t want to use it – I want to see what is available. Unless there is some pressing need or approval from on high, I don’t install previews.
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
But, wondering what’s up with those sizes?
WuMgr seems to show the size of a full Windows download / all updates, not the specific update. We just ignore that bit.
Out of curiosity, is there a setting in WuMgr that can be enabled to prevent Week C/D Preview builds from being offered
Nope, it shows all updates and lets you decide.
cheers, Paul
Paul T “WuMgr seems to show the size of a full Windows download / all updates, not the specific update. We just ignore that bit.”
Funny – I never noticed that before. Thanks!
- Thinkpad P15s Gen1 20T4-002KUS, i7-10510U, UEFI/GPT, 16GB, Sammy 500GB M.2.
others...
- Mint Cinnamon 21 current, Win 10 22H2. WuMgr. HP laserjets M254dw & P1606dn, Epson 2480 scanner.
Yesterday I installed 22H2 on Win 11 Pro.
This post only to let you know that, after restart, Ethernet connection wasn’t able to retrieve IP address from DHCP. Toubleshooting wizard returned Unknown error at the very first page.
I solved thi issue now, disabling “LiveQoS NDIS 6 Filter Driver”, “Npcap Packet Driver (NPCAP)” and “Shrew Soft Lightweight Filter” from the elements of the connection properties (thanks God, we have yet the old fashon window “Card settings” & “Connection Properties” !!).
Network card is a Realtek PCIe GBE Family Controller on an HP Probook G5.
Yesterday I installed 22H2 on Win 11 Pro.
This post only to let you know that, after restart, Ethernet connection wasn’t able to retrieve IP address from DHCP. Toubleshooting wizard returned Unknown error at the very first page.
I solved thi issue now, disabling “LiveQoS NDIS 6 Filter Driver”, “Npcap Packet Driver (NPCAP)” and “Shrew Soft Lightweight Filter” from the elements of the connection properties (thanks God, we have yet the old fashon window “Card settings” & “Connection Properties” !!).
Network card is a Realtek PCIe GBE Family Controller on an HP Probook G5.
Agreed those old fashioned windows are very helpful. I hope they are retained in Windows 11 or at least replaced with functional equivalents.
Thanks for detailing how you resolved the lost connection.
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