[SOLVED] Win7 to 10 Upgrade crashes with Error Code: 0x80070003 - 0x2000D

Indeed, I have my default User folder set to the D:\ drive, the All Users folder is in D:\Users\All Users
 
Collect System Variables
  1. Click the Start button and in the search box, type Command Prompt
  2. When you see Command Prompt on the list, right-click on it and select Run as administrator.
  3. When command prompt opens, copy and paste the following command into it, then press enter.

    Code:
    set > "%userprofile%\Desktop\set.txt"
  4. This will create a file, set.txt on your Desktop. Please attach that file to your next reply.
 
I suggest to restore the system variables which where changed to D: to their default values.
After that is done restart the machine.
Try the upgrade again and report the result.
 
Wouldn't that break many programs? Or are the User-data transferred (not the Download folder)? I fear the C drive might be too small to accommodate all the data and the new OS. I still need to be able to use my computer for work while I do this troubleshooting.
Could Sym-links be helpful in this case?
 
Wouldn't that break many programs?
I have no idea. Never messed with system variables.
May best to copy all files/folders in D:\Users\All Users to C:\Users\All Users before you restore D: back to C:.

If the upgrade is successful you may set D: again instead of C:

I fear the C drive might be too small to accommodate all the data and the new OS.
What size is the C drive ?
 
120GB is not much but should be fine for Windows 10 alone.
How much free size you currently have on drive C ?

Please try the instruction provided in message #26.
 
At the moment the C drive has 20Gb of free space. My Account Folders on D are close to 0.5Tb... I am trying to do some cleaning but it's still hard to make it manageable so that they could be moved to C.
I did copy the All Users folders to C:, shall I try an update as is (i.e. with default directories still set to D:\)?
 
I did copy the All Users folders to C:, shall I try an update as is (i.e. with default directories still set to D:\)?
Yes. Try to upgrade and report the result.
 
Hi Peter, sorry for the long silence. I did try one regular update with updates on the fly and it "crashed" as previously. Unfortunately you don't get the error-code message when you do the update like this but it behaved the same as last times I tried so I guess nothing has really changed.
I have been trying to slim down my User Folders so I could reset them to the System drive (fitting 0.5Tb of data over just 20Gb free space and leaving space for the update ain't easy) and it's taking some time of sorting out 10 years of files and stuff. If I find the funds, I might get a new SSD where to transfer my System data and make it the new boot drive, let's see :)
 
I did try one regular update with updates on the fly and it "crashed" as previously.
Which update was that ?
Provide a screenshot or take a picture of the crash if possible.

Copy the file C:\Windows\Logs\CBS\cbs.log to your desktop.
Zip the copied file and attach the zipped cbs.log to your next reply.
 
Sorry, I used confusing language. I meant doing the win10 upgrade online with the "looking for update" phase not skipped (if I skip it and do an offline upgrade I get to one reboot at least lol).
 

Attachments

Follow the instructions below to run a scan with the System Update Readiness Tool (SURT) and provide a log.
  1. Download SURT for your system. (Windows 7 SP1 x64)
  2. Once downloaded, execute the installer, and go through the installation (this process can take around 15-20 minutes).
  3. On completion, a log will be created in C:\Windows\Logs\CBS\CheckSUR.log.
  4. Attach this log to your next reply.
Alternatively, if these instructions are unclear for you, you can follow the tutorial below.
System Update Readiness Tool (SURT)
 
Okay, that log is clean.
Attach following files to your next reply.
C:\Windows\WindowsUpdate.log
C:\$Windows.~BT\Sources\panther\setupact.log
C:\Windows\panther\setuperr.log
 
Collect Services Information:
1. Click the Start button and then type cmd in the searchbox. Right-click on cmd that comes up in the search results and select Run as administrator.
2. A User Account Control dialog may come up asking for approval. If it does go ahead and allow.
3. A command prompt window will open. Copy and paste the following into the command-prompt and hit enter.
wmic service get name,displayname,pathname,startmode,exitcode > "%USERPROFILE%\desktop\services.txt"
4. After the command runs there will be a file on your desktop named services.txt.
5. Attach this file to your next reply.
 
Copy the file C:\Windows\Logs\dism\dism.log to your desktop.
Attach this file to your next reply.
 

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