Microsoft has addressed a known issue causing File Explorer to freeze on Windows 11 and Windows Server systems after viewing a file's effective access permissions.
When users of affected devices click the "View effective access" button under Properties > Advanced to check a shared file or folder effective permissions, they may see a message stating "Computing effective access...." without displaying the query results.
Additionally, the explorer.exe process will keep using CPU resources even after closing the Advanced Security settings dialog, leading to File Explorer freezes.
It's important to note that this issue is primarily observed in non-consumer environments and is unlikely to affect individuals using Windows devices at home.
The known issue impacts systems running the latest Windows releases, including Windows 11 21H2/22H2 and Windows Server 2022. According to Microsoft, users will experience Explorer freezes after installing Windows updates released since May 9th, 2023.
Microsoft addressed it on Tuesday for Windows 11 22H2 users with the release of this month's optional cumulative update (KB5027303), and it will be made generally available to all affected Windows users with the release of July Patch Tuesday cumulative updates.
"This update addresses an issue that affects File Explorer. It might stop responding indefinitely. This occurs after you try to view the effective access permissions for files in File Explorer," Microsoft explained.
"This issue will be resolved on other affected Windows versions in updates that will be released in the near term," the company added on the Windows release health tracker.
Workaround available for users still affected by this bug
Redmond also provides a workaround for Windows 11 21H2 and Windows Server 2022 users impacted by this known issue, advising them to reboot their systems or sign out.
"If you have attempted to view effective access, you can mitigate the CPU usage issue by restarting your device or by signing out for the affected user," Microsoft said.
Two weeks ago, the company also addressed a Windows 11 bug triggering intermittent failures when saving and copying files on Windows 11 22H2 systems.
The known issue was fixed in the KB5027231 cumulative update released during this month's Patch Tuesday.
Comments
NoneRain - 1 year ago
<p>Windows' File Manager is so old, it shows in every corner. Compared to others: Indexing is slow and resource intensive. Searching is extremely slow. It freezes when other service using it freezes. If it freezes, other services using it also may freeze. It freezes when a device malfunction, and it tries to access it. It's deep integrated on the system, so a lot of stuff might just lag or freeze as well. Fixes and improvements will never resolve these. Unfortunately, MS doesn't seem capable, neither have the balls to remake what is necessary. //Rant off</p>
DrkKnight - 1 year ago
Creating eye candy is more important to them , functionality takes a back seat.