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windows could not start vmware authorise service on local computer.

Error 1075 : the dependency service does not exist or has been marked as deletion

I have installed windows7 home basic so i am not geeting any - local user and group option in computer managment and i am already login as Admin though i am not able to start service manually

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  • 6
    Click your VMware installer again to repair it (do not restart your machine). The VMware services will be started. I'm using VMware 9 and runing on windows 8, I could not find the solution to workaround this issue, I think it's bug. Mar 9, 2013 at 11:43
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    iDev has the correct answer. Should not need repaired, most likely just the service not running. Dec 6, 2013 at 5:43
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    Please check iDev's correct answer as verified !! Sep 11, 2014 at 20:57
  • @TomStickel Error 1075 occurs when trying to start the service. Apparently, the installer won't repair unless the versions match exactly, either. I'm running 9.0.4 and the installer is for 9.0.2 so it won't repair. Very annoying.
    – Mark Good
    May 19, 2015 at 11:51

12 Answers 12

100

To fix this solution i followed: this

1.Click Start and then type Run

2.Type services.msc and click OK

3.Scroll down the list and locate that the VMware Authorization service.

4.Click Start the service, unless the service is showing a status of Started.

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    Exactly! This is the correct answer to blindly re-install /reboot that is just crazy. Dec 6, 2013 at 5:41
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    The Error 1075 is what you get when you try to start the VMware Authorization Service.
    – Timee
    Feb 11, 2015 at 18:59
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    This answer is getting a lot of upvotes - note that this quoted VMWare KB article is addressing a different problem then the OP had (service can't start, not service isn't running). I myself had this problem, and this solution didn't fix it. Are the people who are upvoting this answer really getting an error when starting up the VMWare Authorization Service? Or are they seeing errors as a result of that service being down.
    – deadcode
    Feb 28, 2015 at 0:09
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    @TomStickel a lots of people including me, how have this question already tried this, and failed to start the service, the service is automatic, and it must start automatically when it didnt start, we cant just start the service manually(if you try that you will get error) so I think it is not a solution at all!
    – Lrrr
    Apr 5, 2015 at 7:00
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    On windows 10, Re-running the installer and selecting "repair" fixed this problem for me.
    – nucc1
    Sep 12, 2015 at 12:30
37

This problem was solved for me by repairing vmware with the run installer which fixed the services correctly.

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6

I followed Telvin's suggestion and it worked on Windows 7:

  1. Run the VMware installer by right clicking on it and selecting "Run as Administrator"
  2. In the resulting popup menu, select "Repair installation"
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1.Click Start and then type Run (or Windows button + R)

2.Type services.msc and click OK

3.Find all VMware services.

4.For each, click Start the service, unless the service is showing a status of Started.

  • If "Start the service" is disappear, please do these things before:

    1. Click Start and then type Run (or Windows button + R)
    2. Type msconfig and click OK
    3. In Services tab, find then check all VMware services checkboxes.
    4. Click Apply then OK.
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I've also had this problem recently.

The solution that worked for me was to uninstall vmware, restart windows, and the reinstall vmware.

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Run as admin - vmware workstation will do.

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Error in Events:

The application (VMware Workstation, from vendor VMware, Inc.) has the following problem: To function properly, VMware Workstation must be reinstalled after you upgrade Windows.

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I have a similar problem: I have to start manually this service once in a while. For those of you who have the same problem you can create a bat file and execute it when the service is not running (VMAuthdService service). This doesn't solve the problem, it's just a kind of workaround. The content of the file is the following:

:: BatchGotAdmin
:-------------------------------------
REM  --> Check for permissions
>nul 2>&1 "%SYSTEMROOT%\system32\cacls.exe" "%SYSTEMROOT%\system32\config\system"

REM --> If error flag set, we do not have admin.
if '%errorlevel%' NEQ '0' (
    echo Requesting administrative privileges...
    goto UACPrompt
) else ( goto gotAdmin )

:UACPrompt
    echo Set UAC = CreateObject^("Shell.Application"^) > "%temp%\getadmin.vbs"
    echo UAC.ShellExecute "%~s0", "", "", "runas", 1 >> "%temp%\getadmin.vbs"

    "%temp%\getadmin.vbs"
    exit /B

:gotAdmin
    if exist "%temp%\getadmin.vbs" ( del "%temp%\getadmin.vbs" )
    pushd "%CD%"
    CD /D "%~dp0"
:--------------------------------------

net start VMAuthdService

Name the file Start Auth VmWare.bat

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type Services at search, then start Services

enter image description here

then start all VM services

enter image description here

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You can fix this by starting the service manually.

  1. Type services in the Windows search bar.
  2. Open Services; scroll to the VMware Authorization Service (should be close to the bottom of the page)
  3. Double-click to open the Properties page of the service.
  4. Change the startup type to Automatic and then start the service. That way, the service will be started automatically every time you log in.

More detailed info can be found at Powering on a virtual machine fails with the error: The VMware Authorization Service is not running (1007131)

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Try executing vmware as administrator

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This problem was solved for me by running VMware workstation as Windows administrator. From the start menu right click on the VMware workstation, then select "Run as Administrator"

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