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I'm on a slow dial-up connection, and my Windows 8 is downloading some critical updates. The connection keeps disconnecting, so I was thinking if it was possible to pause the updates download?
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I'm on a slow dial-up connection, and my Windows 8 is downloading some critical updates. The connection keeps disconnecting, so I was thinking if it was possible to pause the updates download?
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As far as I'm aware there is no way to pause an in-progress Windows Update download. Most sites I checked on Google agree.
I would say while disconnected from the internet, turn off Windows updates until you're on a faster connection. I haven't used Windows 8 yet, but on Windows 7 (should be similar to 8 unless I'm totally mistaken) it is in Control Panel > System and Security > Windows Update (or just type this into your explorer bar: Control Panel\System and Security\Windows Update). On the left choose Change Settings and turn them off for now.
Thanks for your reply. Well I've just finished updating my window. It took around 1 hour . – user206414 – 2013-03-12T17:54:45.720
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It turns out that you can stop the windows update service manually, if you have Administrator privileges.
Open a cmd
prompt as Admin (right click the .exe and choose Run as Administrator), and type
net stop wuauserv
You can start it again with
net start wuauserv
As suggested by @arolpx, I had a look and stopping the Background Intelligent Transfer Services (BITS) manually will ensure that Windows Update cannot transfer anything.
From the linked source:
If the service is disabled, then any applications that depend on BITS, such as Windows Update or MSN Explorer, will be unable to automatically download programs and other information.
Sources:
1@Alex, Stopping the service alone is part of the solution (step 1), you are right, though the last step (step 2)is to stop the Background Intelligent Transfer Service as well, and then all transfers stop. – None – 2014-11-04T16:34:38.550
If it is a Windows service, wouldn't it be possible to do it from the Services window as well (for instance opened by Services.msc from the command line)? (service "Automatic Updates" in Windows XP and "Windows Update" in Windows 7.) – Peter Mortensen – 2014-04-28T16:04:37.433
Possibly - I'll try to remember to see if it's in the list next time it starts. – Alex – 2014-04-28T16:06:25.620
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Since Windows 10 (at least, possibly earlier) the answer by Alex doesn't stop all Windows update downloads anymore, because much of the downloading responsibility has moved to other services.
Stopping these three services, however, seems to work in Windows 10:
net stop wuauserv
net stop bits
net stop dosvc
That stops the windows update service, the background intelligent transfer service, and the delivery optimization service, respectively. All of these are involved in Windows update downloads.
Note: usually one or of the above will services fail to stop, with a message like The Windows Update service could not be stopped.
. Running the commands a second time will usually result in a successful stop.
You can, of course, also stop these from the GUI in services.msc.
3This is the correct answer on Windows 10. – Icode4food – 2016-07-13T08:17:12.047
1+1 for new W10 info. Though, knowing how W10 sometimes behaves, do you know whether it will restart these by itself at some point? – Alex – 2016-09-12T10:18:33.763
1They will restart on a restart of your box, but I haven't notice it happening by itself though. – BeeOnRope – 2016-09-13T00:46:14.193
@Alex - FWIW, I am noticing that the service is continually restarting now (after a delay of a few minutes usually). I haven't found a workaround yet. – BeeOnRope – 2017-04-07T20:28:03.740
@BeeOnRope I didn't stop at net stop
. I went ahead and opened services.msc
and found these three services, setting them to the Disabled state. I also kept running these net stop
commands every 10 minutes or so (just for an hour) to make sure the services didn't start up again. – ADTC – 2017-05-31T04:14:35.343
For what it's worth, this has stopped working reliably for me although it did in the earlier Windows 10 versions. The processes usually stop but then quickly start back up again. At the moment I don't have a great solution other than setting the network to "metered network". – BeeOnRope – 2017-06-01T02:00:21.607
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This is a GUI based version of the answer by Alex:
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You need to stop these 2 or 3 services: "Windows Update", "Background Intelligent Transfer" and (for Windows 10 only) "Delivery Optimization"
Please retry once or twice if stopping any of them fails
net stop wuauserv
net stop bits
:: The next one is only for Windows 10
net stop dosvc
Once again if you get an error like "The service could not be stopped" you should retry a couple of times. If it still fails you may want to disable the service (don't forget to re-enable it) and then kill the related processes. Note that Windows should handle such abrupt interruptions gracefully (after all power losses are much worse and happen all the time) but if you are paranoid about your system's stability you may wish to avoid the "murder". Anyway I would also take a look at my installation because a healthy system should honor the stop request.
If you issue the net stop commands and get an error like "Invalid service name" you've made a spelling error (or you're trying to stop dosvc on Windows 7 or 8 -- don't bother this service exists only on Windows 10)
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I think the easiest way is to stop its process from Task Manager.
I discourage doing this; it will kill the process, but Windows will automatically restart it very quickly. – jsalonen – 2015-07-28T21:24:52.180
2That doesn't pause the updates it kills them stone dead. – suspectus – 2014-05-11T08:47:41.210
It stops the process at once, but when windows update is started again, it resumes. Technically it works as pause-resume. – Mostafiz Rahman – 2014-05-11T09:30:41.860
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Windows key > type SERVICES.MSC and press ENTER. Scroll down the list and double-click on WINDOWS UPDATE > change Startup type to Disabled > APPLY > OK.
2That doesn't temporarily pause the download, as asked in the question. – fixer1234 – 2015-04-22T10:08:44.987
hello and welcome to SuperUser. since your connection is that unstable, have you considered asking a friend to manually download those same updates for you? - windows updates are not pausable, the closest choice you have is to select the updates you want to do at once. (if applicable, you can also stop them for the time being, and re-enable them when at a faster connection.) – Lorenzo Von Matterhorn – 2013-03-12T13:30:59.107
@Znau After googling a lot I've found a software called "wsus offline updater" , I will tell my friend to download updates using that software so I can install them offline. – user206414 – 2013-03-12T18:00:27.750