Japanatron Logo

A corrupt WMI repository can mess up things like the Symantec management agent and its ability to deploy software.  If you check properties of "WMI Control" in Computer Management (under Services & Applications), and it shows problems, then the PC likely has a WMI issue.  Here's how to repair it.

I use powershell remoting to remotely run this, but it can be done at the PC's command line too.  The command format below assumes powershell remoting.

Check the WMI repository.
1. Go to C:\Windows\system32\wbem
2. winmgmt /verifyrepository

If errors are found, try to repair the repository.
1. winmgmt /salvagerepository

Still not working?  Then totally rebuild the repository.
1. Stop the Windows Management Instrumentation service.
2. Rename the C:\Windows\system32\wbem\repository folder to something like repository-old
3. Re-register relevant DLLs: cmd.exe /C "for /f %s in ('dir /b *.dll') do regsvr32 /s %s"
4. Re-register all the MOF files: cmd.exe /C "for /f %s in ('dir /b *.mof *.mfl') do mofcomp %s"
5. Start the Windows Management Instrumentation service.

Related Articles

Running Adobe Illustrator with...

Here's a quick one.  I've been struggling with getting Adobe Illustrator (Creative Cloud) to run properly with user-level privileges.  It would often freeze and...

Windows - How to Run Add Print...

I had an end user that wanted to install their home printer drivers on their office laptop.  I took remote control of their PC, but to my chagrin the user lacke...

Windows - Disable Startup Reco...

If a colleague's PC crashes, Windows will restart into start-up recovery.  The problem here is that start-up recovery often makes an even bigger mess of the com...

Windows - Install Fonts Via Co...

I found this awesome Windows powershell script that allows you to install fonts via the command line.  This is very convenient for mass deployment.$ssfFonts = 0...