2. 8007F0F4 – STATUS_PREREQUISITE_FAILED
There are no less than six errors for failed Windows XP SP3 installations which produce the with the “8007F0F4 – STATUS_PREREQUISITE_FAILED” log. The six errors have just as many causes, starting with the installation process failing to continue on computers running on battery power. In this case, Microsoft explained that in order to prevent and “update failure because of battery power exhaustion during the installation process,” it generated the following error: “this Service Pack requires the machine to be on AC Power before setup starts.”
“Service Pack 3 Setup has been canceled because Microsoft Shared Computer Toolkit for Windows XP is not compatible with this version of Windows. Before you can continue, you must: 1) Uninstall Microsoft Shared Computer Toolkit 2) (Optional) Install Windows SteadyState, the newer version of Microsoft Shared Computer Toolkit. For more detailed information, go to the Shared Access page on the Microsoft Web site,” is the second of the 8007F0F4 – STATUS_PREREQUISITE_FAILED series of errors, and the message is self explanatory.
As it released the gold bits of XP SP3, Microsoft informed of an incompatibility between the MUI pack for XP SP2 and SP3. The issue affects specifically the Multilingual User Interface Pack (MUI) for the Remote Desktop Connection 6.0 (Terminal Services Client 6.0). “Service Pack 3 Setup has been canceled because Windows XP SP3 cannot be installed over RDP 6.0 MUI PACK (Update for Windows XP (KB925877)). Before you can continue, you must Uninstall KB925877” is the error message presented to users.
You also have to keep in mind that Service pack 3 is designed to integrate only with the 32-bit editions of Windows XP, and nothing more. Attempting to deploy SP3 on top of Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs (WinFLP) will result in the following error message: “Microsoft Windows XP Professional Service Pack 3 cannot be applied to Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs (WinFLP). A unique SP3 update package for WinFLP will be made available at [the Download Center].”
The same is valid for the Embedded for Point of Service (WEPOS) operating system, and users will be informed that “Microsoft Windows XP Professional Service Pack 3 cannot be applied to Windows Embedded for Point of Service (WEPOS).”
According to the Redmond company: “setup cannot continue because one or more prerequisites required to install Service Pack 3 failed. For More details check the Log File Drive_Letter:windowssvcpack.log” is an error message produced by the installation of Service Pack 3 on top of Windows XP Media Center Edition or over Windows XP Media Center Edition 2003. For all the problems enumerated above Microsoft has fixes in places via Knowledge Base article 949388.
3. XP SP3: “Access is denied” or “Service Pack installation did not complete”
The third and final service pack for Windows XP will also fail to deploy if the installation process comes across registry keys that it cannot modify. In such cases, the error messaged presented to the end user reveal that there has been a Service Pack 3 setup error and that “Access is denied” or that “Service Pack installation did not complete.” There are various ways to resolve this issue, and they are all described in detail in KB949377.
“You may receive these error messages if permissions for one or more registry keys are restricted in a way that prevents the update of those registry keys,” Microsoft informed. “Some programs change the system access control lists (SACL) in the Registry so that administrator accounts cannot alter them. The service pack installer runs under the user (admin) account and not under the SYSTEM account. Failure to update a registry key causes the Setup program to fail.”
4. You do not have enough free disk space on %SystemDrive% to archive the uninstall files
This is without a doubt the most easily solvable problem relates to the installation of XP SP3 RTM. The error message “Service Pack 3 Setup Error - You do not have enough free disk space on %SystemDrive% to archive the uninstall files,” is of course related to a scenario where there is insufficient disk space available for the archiving of the uninstall files. XP SP3 will not go ahead with the deployment because without the uninstall files end users will not be able to remove the service pack. KB949375 deals with this specific issue.

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