Plagued by random BSoDs

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  1. Posts : 2,528
    Windows 10 Pro x64
       #31

    If you're on x64, you need to set DisablePagingExecutive to 1 to get good stack information, for what it's worth.
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  2. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #32

    And now I'm starting to get "frequent" usermode crashes. A while ago, LCore.exe (mouse profiling software) crashed, it crashed again about an hour later (after restarting it), and Explorer crashed while I was dumping. The exception from the Windows error reporting was ACCESS_VIOLATION, for both LCore.exe crashes and Explorer. Just added Windows Error Reporting to my "Bugcheck" custom view (in Event Viewer), and I can confirm that these ACCESS_VIOLATIONS go on for quite some time.
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  3. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #33

    Random thought: is there some way to get the actual location on the RAM that a virtual address corresponds to? If this is some RAM failure, it is likely that everything would run into issues around the same block of RAM.

    In other news, X apparently runs somewhat slowly partially since I'm on only 6GB of RAM, so I will probably see about upgrading to at least 2x4GB (replacing my 2GB stick). If there is a RAM issue on a single stick, it should be possible to isolate it with a bit of experimentation.
    Just a side question, why should I have both sticks being the same capacity? I have 64MB+128MB in my main server box, something which adds up to 1.37GB in my game server box, and I have no idea what in a seperate Windows box; those three are rock-solid systems.
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  4. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #34

    Couple new dumps are up at http://cdusto.selfip.com/7f_dump_06.zip. I'm also getting symbol resolve issues on that pair of dumps
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  5. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #35

    Just a possible curiosity, I have my system in my custom "Display always on" power configuration, and it hasn't BSoD'd in the middle of the night when I leave it on (though note that some nights I put it to hibernation). Recently, I've only had to reboot the system when:
    * Dial-up networking doesn't release (?) COM10 (BT link to my cell phone) properly when Bluetooth gets disabled (to note, it almost always releases the port correctly)
    * Flash player causes the system to lock up (this one is confusing, since Flash doesn't have a kernel portion, and OS-reserved hotkeys (Super-L, Ctrl+Alt+Del, etc.) don't go through)
    * Installing updates for Windows
    * Swap blocks when X is unresponsive due to needing to swap
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  6. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #36

    Quick update, I'm tending to not get BSoDs now, which is actually a step backwards because now I'm just getting lockups.

    I'm still biased towards it being part of the display driver; no crashes in the middle of the night if the display doesn't go into standby, and most lockups are on battery power, where the display hardware is likely running a seperate graphics adapter (I'm not entirely clear on how the 7520G works).

    The current driver versions are dated 11/2014, so any issue in them would have persisted for some time.
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  7. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #37

    Got a swap hang from X, and it looks graphics related...
    Code:
    lkd> !thread fffffa800b7d2b50 16
    THREAD fffffa800b7d2b50  Cid 178c.15bc  Teb: 000007ffb6544000 Win32Thread: fffff900c2c6bc20 WAIT: (WrPageIn) KernelMode Non-Alertable
        fffffa8006bae408  NotificationEvent
    Not impersonating
    DeviceMap                 fffff8a0057ecee0
    Owning Process            fffffa800546e340       Image:         XRebirth.exe
    Attached Process          N/A            Image:         N/A
    Wait Start TickCount      4802804        Ticks: 191092 (0:00:49:41.054)
    Context Switch Count      182538         IdealProcessor: 0                 LargeStack
    UserTime                  00:00:56.597
    KernelTime                00:00:37.767
    *** ERROR: Symbol file could not be found.  Defaulted to export symbols for C:\Windows\system32\atiumd64.dll - 
    Win32 Start Address atiumd64!XdxInitXopAdapterServices (0x000007feddb3886c)
    Stack Init fffff88002bacc70 Current fffff88002bac4d0
    Base fffff88002bad000 Limit fffff88002ba6000 Call 0
    Priority 10 BasePriority 8 UnusualBoost 0 ForegroundBoost 2 IoPriority 2 PagePriority 5
    GetContextState failed, 0x80004001
    Unable to get current machine context, HRESULT 0x80004001
    Child-SP          RetAddr           : Args to Child                                                           : Call Site
    fffff880`02bac510 fffff800`034810f2 : fffffa80`0b7d2b50 fffffa80`0b7d2b50 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`00000001 : nt!KiSwapContext+0x7a
    fffff880`02bac650 fffff800`0348390f : fffff8a0`0845cd10 fffff880`03dd6a7f fffff880`00000000 fffff8a0`12d13c90 : nt!KiCommitThreadWait+0x1d2
    fffff880`02bac6e0 fffff800`0341ec0c : fffffa80`07fc4000 00000000`00000009 00000000`00009000 fffff8a0`12d13c00 : nt!KeWaitForSingleObject+0x19f
    fffff880`02bac780 fffff800`034ad3c4 : 00000000`00000000 fffff680`002465d8 fffffa80`038347e0 00000000`000000a0 : nt!MiWaitForCollidedFaultComplete+0x110
    fffff880`02bac7e0 fffff800`03499bff : 00000000`00000001 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 fffffa80`0546e6d8 : nt!MiResolveTransitionFault+0x544
    fffff880`02bac870 fffff800`034890b9 : 00000000`08edf720 ffffffff`ffffffff fffff880`02bacb60 fffff800`0347e8af : nt!MiDispatchFault+0x95f
    fffff880`02bac980 fffff800`03479fee : 00000000`00000001 00000000`48cbb3a0 fffffa80`075e7901 00000000`4ab16e48 : nt!MmAccessFault+0x359
    fffff880`02bacae0 000007fe`ddb3798d : 000007fe`dd61b14d 00000000`4ab16e48 00000000`4ab16e48 00000000`08edf919 : nt!KiPageFault+0x16e (TrapFrame @ fffff880`02bacae0)
    00000000`08edf848 000007fe`dd61b14d : 00000000`4ab16e48 00000000`4ab16e48 00000000`08edf919 00000000`07336fb8 : atiumd64!XdxInitXopAdapterServices+0x38f97d
    00000000`08edf850 00000000`00000000 : 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 00000000`00000000 : atiumd64!DllMain+0xa14d
    Since neither !thread nor !process are actually giving the IRP list (not implemented???), I currently have WinDbg searching for all IRPs for the hung thread.

    I also got my symbol resolve issue fixed, so I'll look at some of my recent dumps when I have the chance.

    EDIT: Terminating a process shouldn't prevent one from finding the IRP which is blocking the process from actually terminating, right?
    Last edited by TruePikachu; 17 Mar 2015 at 11:30.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #38

    Okay, just confirmed that the issue is 100% not caused by the graphics driver. Did a full wipe of the "old" one (which was the newest version installed, Nov 2014 IIRC), installed the original OEM driver set, switched the power profile to one which puts the display in sleep, went to bed. In the morning, Firefox had crashed and "HPOSD" had crashed (HP On-Screen Display, handles indication for e.g. brightness and volume when setting them). Unplugged my mouse and brought the screen back into sleep manually (PowerShell script), came back about 4 hours later and I had a BSoD, SYSTEM_SERVICE_EXCEPTION (looks like an attempt to both read and write at ff96f900`c0859370:
    Code:
    win32k!xxxWindowHitTest+0x51:
    fffff960`001688b1 ff4308          inc     dword ptr [rbx+8] ds:002b:ff96f900`c0859378=????????
    Last set context:
    rax=fffff900c08595e0 rbx=ff96f900c0859370 rcx=fffff900c08595e0
    rdx=0000002f00000069 rsi=0000000000000001 rdi=0000000000000000
    rip=fffff960001688b1 rsp=fffff880093519a0 rbp=0000000000000000
     r8=0000000000000000  r9=0000000000000001 r10=fffff960001af964
    r11=fffff88009351980 r12=0000000000000011 r13=00000000001efd20
    r14=0000000000000010 r15=0000000074c92450
    iopl=0         nv up ei ng nz na pe nc
    cs=0010  ss=0018  ds=002b  es=002b  fs=0053  gs=002b             efl=00210282
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  9. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #39

    Uninstalled both imdisk and MagicDisc, in the one night of testing, I didn't get a BSoD, but Firefox still crashed. Research online indicates that MagicDisc could possibly be the culprit. Not marking solved until I can confirm the BSoDs are gone, though.

    EDIT: They aren't.
    Last edited by TruePikachu; 31 Mar 2015 at 12:19.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 47
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 x64
    Thread Starter
       #40

    Just a quick update over to here, I recently (2-3 days ago) removed AODDriver2.sys, and while I haven't yet done comprehensive testing, a couple oddities disappeared. Specifically, KeePass doesn't seem to ask for my password anymore when I change attached displays, and I no longer have to cancel the fingerprint reader when typing my Windows password after resume from standby.

    I'm actually slightly surprised that nobody noticed or thought anything about AODDriver, given the number of hits I've gotten from sevenforums relating to BSoDs when I searched recently...

    EDIT: Not the cause of issues.
    Last edited by TruePikachu; 23 May 2015 at 02:55.
      My Computer


 
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