Windows Bsod carried over from Windows 7


  1. Posts : 3
    Windows
       #1

    Windows Bsod carried over from Windows 7


    I have been getting a BSOD several times a week for months now. I updated to windows 10 hoping that it would be more stable, but nothing has really changed. Basically I keep getting similar BSODs relating to ntoskrnl.exe and ntkrnlmp.exe.

    It would happen pretty much at any time in any application.

    I have been reading over the course of these months trying to solve my BSOD. I installed Blue Screen Viewer, Who Crashed, and finally WinDbg in the hopes of finding the offender. Nothing really has helped me as it seems the processes pointed to are the ones I listed above.

    I have tried testing my ram by booting with only one stick at a time, and so far everything seems okay. I have used Memtetest86 and Windows Memory Diagnostic tool several times and each time there are no indications of error.

    I have tried reformatting my computer several times with no luck.

    I am overclocking my i7-930 cpu to 4 GHZ, but it is an overclock that I have been running for a couple years now with good cooling (60 degrees max temps) and everything has been very stable up until the point. While I have tried lowering my OC, I haven't actually tested my system of default settings, but I will. I do have my doubts about it improving stability though.

    The actual BSODs started after I did my routine reformat and reinstall of Windows around 4-5 months ago. But I did not notice the problem until I started playing FPS games.

    I would greatly appreciate any help, especially if it involves helping me sort through this mess of characters that the dmp files contain.

    I have uploaded my file according to the 'Posting Instructions' sticky.
    Attachment 39862
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 14,903
    Windows 10 Pro
       #2

    Hi Ryanocerous,

    Welcome to the 10forums.

    A few drivers have been flagged.

    This is likely the driver from your mouse.
    Please check here for driver updates
    Code:
    *** WARNING: Unable to verify timestamp for habu.sys*** ERROR: Module load completed but symbols could not be loaded for habu.sys
    
    
    6: kd> lmvm habu
    start             end                 module name
    fffff800`656f0000 fffff800`656f3600   habu     T (no symbols)           
        Loaded symbol image file: habu.sys
        Image path: \SystemRoot\system32\drivers\habu.sys
        Image name: habu.sys
        Timestamp:        Fri Aug 07 06:22:07 2009 (4A7BABEF)
        CheckSum:         0000ABBE
        ImageSize:        00003600
        Translations:     0000.04b0 0000.04e4 0409.04b0 0409.04e4

    This is the Marvell Yukon PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet Controller driver
    Please check here for driver updates
    Code:
    *** WARNING: Unable to verify timestamp for yk63x64.sys*** ERROR: Module load completed but symbols could not be loaded for yk63x64.sys
    
    0: kd> lmvm yk63x64
    start             end                 module name
    
    fffff802`00770000 fffff802`007bd000   yk63x64  T (no symbols)           
        Loaded symbol image file: yk63x64.sys
        Image path: \SystemRoot\System32\drivers\yk63x64.sys
        Image name: yk63x64.sys
        Timestamp:        Wed Jan 09 16:46:56 2013 (50ED90F0)
        CheckSum:         00051F63
        ImageSize:        0004D000
        Translations:     0000.04b0 0000.04e4 0409.04b0 0409.04e4
      My Computers


  3. Posts : 3
    Windows
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thank you axe0 for helping me. Unfortunately both those drivers are using the latest ones. The best I can do is uninstall the Yukon driver and revert to an older version.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 14,903
    Windows 10 Pro
       #4

    That will not help, both drivers are not compatible with Windows 10 looking at their dates.
      My Computers


  5. Posts : 3
    Windows
    Thread Starter
       #5

    axe0 said:
    That will not help, both drivers are not compatible with Windows 10 looking at their dates.
    They still might be compatible.

    My system seems stable after adding a little bit more voltage to the QPI/DRAM and DRAM bus voltage. I figured this out after reading about my motherboard and finding out that the manufacture states that having all slots of ram occupied requires manually altering settings in the bios for it to work properly. This is something I figured out through trial and error before, but I wasn't really sure if it was luck or not since I lost that specific profile. Now I know.

    But I think I still need to test my system a little more before I consider my BSODs solved.

    Anyways, thanks for your help. I didn't know that my Ethernet driver was being listen in the dmp files.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 14,903
    Windows 10 Pro
       #6

    You're welcome :)

    Let me know how it goes
      My Computers


 

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