Serious flaw discovered in Windows Vista's Explorer


Recommended Posts

For anyone who is interested, here are the reproduction steps:

  1. Click on Start, and then click on Documents.
  2. In the Search entry box, type "NOT Shortcut" (without the quotes).
  3. Click on the "Save Search" button and save the search query as "Search Test".

I've removed the rest of the post due to the un-necessary amount of spam that I have received in the past 24 hours.

Edited by iCeFuSiOn

Very close to being blogspam. This is a serious flaw? Worst case scenario is the explorer process crashes and restarts without even restarting the OS. It may have taken down XP, but Vista just restarts the process and it's fine. Should MS fix it...of course. Is it a major flaw that's going to have any real impact, no. MS can fix it easily with a patch. Nice try to fabricate an issue out of nothing though. In fact demonstrates how Vista is much more robust against these sort of glitches than XP ever was.

Uhh... so you're searching for something that is NOT a shortcut? ie: pretty much everything? What do you expect to happen? :laugh:

If you're trying to search for documents only and the explorer brings back a list of shortcuts as well, NOT Shortcut will hide them. What it ISN'T supposed to do is crash the shell. This was bugged for SP1 and was marked as "won't fix".

If you're trying to search for documents only and the explorer brings back a list of shortcuts as well, NOT Shortcut will hide them. What it ISN'T supposed to do is crash the shell. This was bugged for SP1 and was marked as "won't fix".

Right, but usually you have something like "<some doc title> NOT Shortcut" and that doesn't crash, in fact it works exactly as expected. But placing just "NOT Shortcut" without any other filter does crash it instantly. So, yea, it crashes if that is your intention, but really this isn't much of an issue. Although it should probably be fixed, it's really not a big deal. Either way, I'm sure a patch will be released eventually. Probably after SP1, though.

I won't call this a serious but probably an unfortunate bug. Vista has other issues that are more important that this. Such as slow copying speeds and folder view thingy.

If you're trying to search for documents only and the explorer brings back a list of shortcuts as well, NOT Shortcut will hide them. What it ISN'T supposed to do is crash the shell. This was bugged for SP1 and was marked as "won't fix".

can use kind:document ? or just remove appdata folder from your index locations...that is what I do.

:rofl:

And to think I actually expected to read about a serious flaw...

Good grief, even in XP bringing back a crashed explorer is as easy as bringing up the task manager and doing a File >> Run explorer.exe

Apparently Vista does that all for you. Hardly anything to bash Vista for.

Not to mention that nobody out there even searches for "NOT Shortcut" by itself (given by the fact that it took over a year to even find this flaw...)

-Spenser

Why are we the source?

heh. we say they are the sourc they say it's us. A nice vicious cycle of sourcing.

Anyway it doesn't seem overly serious but it definitely should be fixed. I doubt it will kill anyone but it's blemishes like this that day in day out tarnish Vista's image. It's not the most pressing issue by all means, but still should be looked at.

We can only curse at things like this because WinFS would have certainly avoided such problems.

*sigh*

:ike:

Go look up WinFS and come back and give us a report on it. WinFS is not what you think it is. ;)

Why are we the source?

He changed it. Here's the original link: http://www.windows-now.com/blogs/kmkenney/...plorer-bug.aspx

As I said... This post is total flame bait and some people have already bitten the hook. ;)

wow the thread title and original post really tries to make this sound like a big deal. unfortunately for them it really isn't i'm sure it will be fixed but i wonder how many times people actually search for NOT shortcut. and anyway explorer restarts quickly really not much of a problem. if this is a seriuos flaw i would like to see how the author would describe all the problems that device drivers are causing in vista.

At a time where everyone is anxiously awaiting the upcoming service pack for Windows Vista (and while others flock back to Windows XP in droves), yet another flaw in the Windows Vista operating system has been discovered that can bring the Windows shell ("Windows Explorer") to its knees within 20 seconds. Even worse, this issue occurs under every day usage of the operating system if you use the Search function regularly with boolean search operators.

  1. Click on Start, and then click on Documents.
  2. In the Search entry box, type "NOT Shortcut" (without the quotes).
  3. Click on the "Save Search" button and save the search query as "Search Test".

This has been confirmed as a flaw in Windows Vista (all editions) and Windows Vista 64-bit (all editions), and even worse, the issue still occurs on the latest release candidate for Service Pack 1, and has been marked as "will not be fixed". The bigger question is, will Microsoft step up to the plate and fix this issue or will they let it pass on by while they work heavily on Windows "7", ignoring the fact that Windows Vista still has flaws and inconsistancies that are seeing larger companies hold back deployment until 2009 or even skip Vista?

Source of instructions to reproduce issue: ActiveWin.com

So from this we can learn a few things.

1) Vista must be in better shape and more on track and stable than the anti-Vista zealots would like for people to believe if it has taken a year for something like this to be classified as a serious flaw. For people that can think for themselves, this is the best pro-Vista post in history...

2) The person that found this flaw is a bit scary to expect this to be a valid search, especially so important to save it as a Search Folder. But hey, everyone to their own thing, so I'm over the scary part.

3) The person that posted this thinks MS is heavily working on Windows 7. Well it is true MS's NT cycle always starts at the end of a product release, so we can assume they are working on Windows 7. However, it is time for the idiots that keep running around thinking MinWin is Windows 7 or any different than the 'tight' kernel that is already in Vista and all previous versions of NT to wake up and watch the presentation or talk to someone at Microsoft for an accurate source on the subject. Windows 7 is not very active yet, and its kernel technology is the same as Vista, and it is scary that after 15 years of NT, people don't yet realize that the NT kernel is in fact very tight and small when you remove the API interface layers. (NT is a light API interface hybrid kernel technology) - This is why MinWin was a basic recompile of Vista kernel with the external APIs turned off, PERIOD.

4) Let's hope the person that found this fatal flaw doesn't do a nested search in a search that is recursive. They will really be mad at Windows then... Which points out another good thing about this bug, instead of dragging the system to a grind in an endless loop, or even choking, Vista just restarts Explorer and goes on its way. PS It will only restart the 'Folder Window' and not fully restart Explorer if you have "Launch folder windows in a separate process" (PS Which is handy to turn on)

Now for the unknown:

There is already an easy fix for this, pick a different freaking syntax, Vista has the most diverse search engine in OS history, with the most extensive set of search options including natural language and strict syntax as the user chooses.

Here is the 'fix' or way to perform the search effortlessly without killing Explorer if you really want to do this search:

NOT (ext:lnk OR ext:url)

-This also excludes Internet shortcuts, and is more accurate as you don't get folders in the mix of results.

NOT ext:lnk

-This is if you only want to exclude plain shortcuts and not Internet shortcuts, and again works better as it doesn't mix folders in the results.

You could also do:

-(ext:lnk OR ext:url)

or

-ext:lnk

Get the idea here? There are numerous ways to get the same results that don't involve killing Explorer

Now with that MAJOR flaw out of the way, this would be a good time to remind people that the search features in Vista are pretty powerful in doing more than just searching for items.

Look up a tool called Start++ from brandontools.com - (it is handy) and from it you can get an idea of how powerful the searching system is and how it can be extended in basic shell and commandline usage even. (Most people don't realize you can get search results in a CMD prompt, or from within their applications.)

Also for people doing more than causal searches, take a minute and read some up on some of the syntax options Vista offers and see why it makes Leopard and even Google Desktop Search look like toys.

This is a good reference page to begin with for the basics of advanced searching in Vista:

http://search.msn.com/docs/toolbar.aspx?t=...earchSyntax.htm

So from this we can learn a few things.

1) Vista must be in better shape and more on track and stable than the anti-Vista zealots would like for people to believe if it has taken a year for something like this to be classified as a serious flaw. For people that can think for themselves, this is the best pro-Vista post in history...

2) The person that found this flaw is a bit scary to expect this to be a valid search, especially so important to save it as a Search Folder. But hey, everyone to their own thing, so I'm over the scary part.

3) The person that posted this thinks MS is heavily working on Windows 7. Well it is true MS's NT cycle always starts at the end of a product release, so we can assume they are working on Windows 7. However, it is time for the idiots that keep running around thinking MinWin is Windows 7 or any different than the 'tight' kernel that is already in Vista and all previous versions of NT to wake up and watch the presentation or talk to someone at Microsoft for an accurate source on the subject. Windows 7 is not very active yet, and its kernel technology is the same as Vista, and it is scary that after 15 years of NT, people don't yet realize that the NT kernel is in fact very tight and small when you remove the API interface layers. (NT is a light API interface hybrid kernel technology) - This is why MinWin was a basic recompile of Vista kernel with the external APIs turned off, PERIOD.

4) Let's hope the person that found this fatal flaw doesn't do a nested search in a search that is recursive. They will really be mad at Windows then... Which points out another good thing about this bug, instead of dragging the system to a grind in an endless loop, or even choking, Vista just restarts Explorer and goes on its way. PS It will only restart the 'Folder Window' and not fully restart Explorer if you have "Launch folder windows in a separate process" (PS Which is handy to turn on)

Now for the unknown:

There is already an easy fix for this, pick a different freaking syntax, Vista has the most diverse search engine in OS history, with the most extensive set of search options including natural language and strict syntax as the user chooses.

Here is the 'fix' or way to perform the search effortlessly without killing Explorer if you really want to do this search:

NOT (ext:lnk OR ext:url)

-This also excludes Internet shortcuts, and is more accurate as you don't get folders in the mix of results.

NOT ext:lnk

-This is if you only want to exclude plain shortcuts and not Internet shortcuts, and again works better as it doesn't mix folders in the results.

You could also do:

-(ext:lnk OR ext:url)

or

-ext:lnk

Get the idea here? There are numerous ways to get the same results that don't involve killing Explorer

Now with that MAJOR flaw out of the way, this would be a good time to remind people that the search features in Vista are pretty powerful in doing more than just searching for items.

Look up a tool called Start++ from brandontools.com - (it is handy) and from it you can get an idea of how powerful the searching system is and how it can be extended in basic shell and commandline usage even. (Most people don't realize you can get search results in a CMD prompt, or from within their applications.)

Also for people doing more than causal searches, take a minute and read some up on some of the syntax options Vista offers and see why it makes Leopard and even Google Desktop Search look like toys.

This is a good reference page to begin with for the basics of advanced searching in Vista:

http://search.msn.com/docs/toolbar.aspx?t=...earchSyntax.htm

Actually, about the MinWin thing, the Core effort (which is the sliced off APIs) used to be called MinWin, but there's another effort to remake the kernel called MinWin and that does involve changing the kernel architecture.

The current slimmed-down kernel need the entire source tree to be built to build the kernel, because even though it doesn't call the APIs above, they're still needed to complete dependencies.

The new MinWin will enable the kernel to be built alone, or parts of the system, which helps in the layering, upkeep and testing of the OS.

Other than that, very informative post :)

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • PotPlayer 260622 by Razvan Serea PotPlayer is an extremely light-weight multimedia player for Windows. It feels like the KMPlayer, but is in active development. Supports almost every available video formats out there. PotPlayer contains internal codecs and there is no need to install codecs manually. Other key features include WebCam/Analog/Digital TV devices support, gapless video playback, DXVA, live broadcasting. Distinctive features of the player is a high quality playback, support for all modern video and audio formats and a built DXVA video codecs. A wide range of subtitles are supported and you are also able to capture audio, video, and screenshots. A comprehensive video and audio player, that also supports TV channels, subtitles and skins. Its been described on the Internet as The KMPlayer redux, and it pretty much is. Daum PotPlayer 260622 (1.7.22963) changelog: Removed Kakao TV Added pause function when navigating via the navigation bar Significantly improved internal stability Fixed an issue where colors appeared strange during RGB24 processing Improved playback for some HTTP streams Improved sync processing for the built-in audio renderer Fixed an issue where certain MP4 files behaved abnormally during playback Download: Daum PotPlayer (64-bit) | 54.7 MB (Freeware) Download: Daum PotPlayer (32-bit) | 61.1 MB View: Daum PotPlayer Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Tixati 3.44 is out.
    • Speccy 1.34.084 by Razvan Serea Speccy will give you detailed statistics on every piece of hardware in your computer. Including CPU, Motherboard, RAM, Graphics Cards, Hard Disks, Optical Drives, Audio support. Additionally Speccy adds the temperatures of your different components, so you can easily see if there's a problem! Processor brand and model Hard drive size and speed Amount of memory (RAM) Graphics card Operating system At first glance, Speccy may seem like an application for system administrators and power users. It certainly is, but Speccy can also help normal users, in everyday computing life. If you need to add more memory to your system, for example, you can check how many memory slots your computer has and what memory's already installed. Then you can go out and buy the right type of memory to add on or replace what you've already got. Download: Speccy 1.34.084 | 20.5 MB (Freeware) View: Speccy Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • ImgDrive 2.2.7 by Razvan Serea ImgDrive is a CD/DVD/BD emulator - a tool that allows you to mount optical disc images by simply clicking on them in Windows Explorer. If you have downloaded an ISO image and want to use it without burning it to a blank disc, ImgDrive is the easiest way to do it. ImgDrive features: One-click mounting of iso, cue, nrg, mds/mdf, ccd, isz images Runs on 32-bit and 64-bit Windows versions Mount ape, flac, m4a, wav, wavpack, tta file as AUDIO CD (16-bit/44.1kHz) Mount a folder as DVD/BD Mount images in command line Does not require rebooting after installation Support up to 7 virtual drives at the same time Support multi session disc image (ccd/mds/nrg) A special portable version is available Translated to more than 10 languages Support File Type: .ccd - CloneCD image files .cue - Cue sheets files of ape/flac/m4a/tta/wav/wv/bin .iso - Standard ISO image files .isz - Compressed ISO image files .nrg - Nero image files .mds - Media descriptor image files ImgDrive 2.2.7 changelog: Added command line parameter to set number of drives Added AACS-Auth support for HD DVD Bumped kernel driver version to 2.2.7 Download: ImgDrive 2.2.7 | 692 KB (Freeware, paid upgrade available) Download: ImgDrive Portable 535 KB View: ImgDrive Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • AnyDesk 9.7.7 by Razvan Serea AnyDesk is a fast remote desktop system and enables users to access their data, images, videos and applications from anywhere and at any time, and also to share it with others. AnyDesk is the first remote desktop software that doesn't require you to think about what you can do. CAD, video editing or simply working comfortably with an office suite for hours are just a few examples. AnyDesk is designed for modern multi-core CPUs. Most of AnyDesk's image processing is done con­currently. This way, AnyDesk can utilize up to 90% of modern CPUs. AnyDesk works across multiple platforms and operating systems: Windows, Linux, Free BSD, Mac OS, iOS and Android. Just 7 megabytes - downloaded in a glimpse, sent via email, or fired up from your USB drive, AnyDesk will turn any desktop into your desktop in se­conds. No administrative privileges or installation needed. AnyDesk 9.7.7 fixes: Fixed an issue that prevented users from creating meetings without an active license Download: AnyDesk 9.7.7 | 8.0 MB (Free for private use, paid upgrade available) Links: AnyDesk Home Page | Other platforms | Release History | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Conversation Starter
      sumytbe earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      B4dM1k3 earned a badge
      One Year In
    • One Year In
      DarkWun earned a badge
      One Year In
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      524
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      199
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      94
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      82
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!