Multiple IRP Complete Request - BSOD


  1. Posts : 8
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #1

    Multiple IRP Complete Request - BSOD


    I am running Windows 7 (obviously I guess, since this site is called SevenForums) on a Biostar P4M90-m7 motherboard with a Pentium 4 3.4GHz chip with Hyperthreading, along with 2GB of Kingston DDR-2 266MHz RAM and a Nvidia Gefore 8500GT video card. I keep getting BSOD's here and there saying something about Multiple IRP Complete Requests...or something like that. I can never get a pen quick enough to write it down before it dumps the physical memory & reboots automatically. I've tried to do a little reasearch on the net but can't come up with anything. I recently uninstalled LogMeIn cuz my memory dump file said something about an error in the tunnel.sys file & someone posted something saying their problem was caused by Logmein. I also removed the LogMeIn Mirror driver that my system performance report keeps telling me about. Does anyone have any idea what I could do to stop this from happening. It's driving me friggin nuts!! Thank you for any help you could give me. Attached is the last minidump file recorded as well as the system performance report & the BSOD-jcriff2 folder along with a file that was referenced about my system data that was dispalyed in an error dialog box.

    Please help!!
      My Computer


  2. JMH
    Posts : 7,952
    Win 7 Ultimate 64-bit. SP1.
       #2

    majikmark said:
    I am running Windows 7 (obviously I guess, since this site is called SevenForums) on a Biostar P4M90-m7 motherboard with a Pentium 4 3.4GHz chip with Hyperthreading, along with 2GB of Kingston DDR-2 266MHz RAM and a Nvidia Gefore 8500GT video card. I keep getting BSOD's here and there saying something about Multiple IRP Complete Requests...or something like that. I can never get a pen quick enough to write it down before it dumps the physical memory & reboots automatically. I've tried to do a little reasearch on the net but can't come up with anything. I recently uninstalled LogMeIn cuz my memory dump file said something about an error in the tunnel.sys file & someone posted something saying their problem was caused by Logmein. I also removed the LogMeIn Mirror driver that my system performance report keeps telling me about. Does anyone have any idea what I could do to stop this from happening. It's driving me friggin nuts!! Thank you for any help you could give me. Attached is the last minidump file recorded as well as the system performance report & the BSOD-jcriff2 folder along with a file that was referenced about my system data that was dispalyed in an error dialog box.

    Please help!!

    majikmark hi and welcome

    This crash was probably caused by your video driver.

    When upgrading your graphic driver you MUST remove all traces of the current driver. In order to do that we recommend using
    http://www.guru3d.com/category/driversweeper/

    When it is removed download and install the fresh copy.

    Let us know if you require further assistance

    Jan
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 8
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    OK, I just tried that & then ran the performance monitor report & now I have more errors that I did before doing that. According to the Driver Sweeper website, it recommends to uninstall the drivers & software through the control paneel, then reboot into safe moed & run Driver Sweeper there. I did that & then rebooted and re-installed the newest version of the driver through the Nvidia website for my GeForce 8500GT. I just did it so I can't tell if that fixed my BSOD but I kinda doubt it. What elese do you think might be the problem?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 2,528
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #4

    I looked at some of these, and they all have one driver in common (it's your double-irp, for one) - MDFSYSNT.sys. I think this is an HFS+ driver for MacDrive? It's making a call to complete an IRP that has already been completed, which causes a bugcheck.

    Perhaps looking into a newer version of this driver would help, because quite a few of these dumps are not video-driver related.
    Code:
     
    0: kd> lmvm MDFSYSNT
    start    end        module name
    87f80000 87fc7000   MDFSYSNT T (no symbols)           
        Loaded symbol image file: MDFSYSNT.sys
        Image path: \SystemRoot\System32\Drivers\MDFSYSNT.sys
        Image name: MDFSYSNT.sys
        Timestamp:        Thu Sep 03 11:50:18 2009 (4A9FE5BA)
        CheckSum:         000471DC
        ImageSize:        00047000
        Translations:     0000.04b0 0000.04e4 0409.04b0 0409.04e4
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 8
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #5

    I do have MacDrive installed to access an external USB drive that was attached to my Mac. Should I just NOT ue the drive with Windows & network it from my Mac?
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 2,528
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #6

    If you don't need physical access to the drive to get to the media, it's always preferable to just use SMB rather than have to add an HFS filter driver to Windows. Also, given this driver appears to be the root cause for the crashes you saw that generated this thread, removing that software and driver from the PC should make it more stable as well. I say, win/win :).
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 8
    Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #7

    Yeah, I guess I don't have a choice. It just took so long to transfer files from a networked drive using HFS+ to NTFS that I though MacDrive was a better solution. I guess patience was a virtue that I was NOT born with. Thank you so much for your help though, this is now my new favorite site.
      My Computer


 

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