Microsoft propose depuis quelques heures une nouvelle mise à jour cumulative pour Windows 10. Nommée KB4089848, elle s’adresse aux PC sous Fall Creators Update alias Windows 10 v1709.
Son installation permet à l’OS de progresser en version 16299.334. Le géant apporte des améliorations d’ordre général et quelques corrections. L’objectif n’est pas la sécurité mais la résolution de problème. Par exemple nous avons un patch censé résoudre un souci de communication avec un périphérique Bluetooth après un redémarrage.
Windows 10 et KB4089848, des correctifs de bugs
Un autre correctif s’attaque au menu Démarrer qui dans certains cas peut se réinitialiser lors d’une mise à niveau vers Fall Creators Update. Ce problème est connu depuis plusieurs mois et assez généralisé. Microsoft a donc pris son temps.
En parallèle KB4089848 apporte des solutions autour de la fonction de vérification de l’orthographe avec des dictionnaires personnalisés. Nous avons des améliorations concernant la prise en charge des fichiers PDF par le navigateur Edge et des optimisation de lecture multimédia. Ce dernier point concerne aussi Internet Explorer.
Il y a malheureusement un problème désormais connu et non résolu. Il est possible que Windows Update History indique une mauvaise installation de KB4089848 bien que ce ne soit pas le cas. Dans cette hypothèse, il suffit de lancer « winver » afin de vérifier le numéro de version de l’OS. Si « 16299.334 » apparait, tout est parfait.
Espérons que KB4089848 soit une mise à jour correcte et que peu de problème d’installation surgisse.
KB4089848, changelog
- Addresses issue with a GDI handle leak in the Windows Ribbon control.
- Addresses issue where users can’t select OK after entering credentials in command line on Windows Server version 1709.
- Addresses issues where Bluetooth devices fail to receive data after a restart.
- Addresses issue where, during BitLocker decryption or encryption of a drive, files protected with the Encrypting File System (EFS) may become corrupted.
- Addresses issue where the server may occasionally encounter an error during file transfer. The error is “Stop D1 in tcpip!TcpSegmentTcbSend”.
- Addresses issue where an iSCSI RESET might trigger a cluster failover.
- Addresses issue in MPIO where pass-through SCSI requests might lead to a stop error if the disk is pending removal.
- Addresses issue where processing of group policies may fail, and policies may be removed as a result. This occurs if the length of the Windows Defender Firewall policy rule exceeds 260 characters.
- Addresses issue caused by a new privilege in Windows Server 2016 and Windows 10 version 1709 named “Obtain an impersonation token for another user in the same session”. When applied using Group Policy to those computers, gpresult /h fails to generate reporting data for any setting configured by the Security Configuration Engine (SCE) extension. The error message is “Requested value ‘SeDelegateSessionUserImpersonatePrivilege’ was not found”. The Group Policy Management Console fails to show the privilege in the Settings tab for a GPO where the setting has been configured.
- Addresses issue where errors may occur when accessing WebDAV files or folders on a SharePoint site if the file or folder name contains multibyte characters.
- Addresses issue where the Remote Desktop License report gets corrupted when it exceeds the 4 KB size limit.
- Addresses issue where an Azure point-to-site VPN connection that uses IKEv2 may fail when the user’s device contains a large number of trusted root certificates.
- Addresses rendering issue in Microsoft Edge for PDF documents with backgrounds created using various third-party publishing tools.
- Addresses issue where a media platform stops responding when changing cameras rapidly on a device.
- Addresses issue where a media platform stops responding, which affects media playback in Microsoft Edge, Internet Explorer, and Microsoft PowerPoint.
- Addresses issue with spatial audio when used in connection to Dolby Atmos for Headphones.
- Addresses issue where a credential prompt that requires administrative privileges appears when a standard user account performs the first logon to a Windows 10 device that has been deployed using Windows Autopilot.
- Addresses issue where tiles in the Start menu aren’t preserved when upgrading from Windows 10 version 1607 to Windows 10 version 1709.
- Addresses issue with Spell Check and custom dictionaries.
- Addresses issue with the press and hold feature when using a pen in Tablet mode.
- Addresses issue with editing web password fields using a touch keyboard.
- Addresses issue where some Bluetooth card readers don’t work after a restart.