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BSOD when I leave my computer on overnight...


shantd

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Hey there. I've got a strange issue that I can't seem to identify. My system seems to have a roughly 3-day lifespan before the BSOD hits. After about 3 days of use, if I leave the computer alone for several hours (ie when I go to bed and leave the system on), I'll return to a BSOD or simply a frozen screen. I realize it sounds like the screensaver or hibernation is the culprit, but it isn't because I've turned those off. I never experience the crash while I'm using the computer. Apparently something is kicking in after several hours of inactivity, but I can't seem to track down what that is. And again, for the first couple days after a restart, it won't happen. By roughly day 3 or 4 is when my system will become primed and ready for it. The event viewer shows nothing. Any ideas? Thanks,

Shant

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I suppose I won't be able to provide that until it happens again. Keep in mind though, that sometimes the screen just freezes...no blue screen. I've been trying to 'cheat' by putting the system into standby mode before going to sleep. This method seems to buy me an extra day or two. At that point (4 days or more without a crash), however, my system will be ultra primed for a crash where leaving it alone for just an hour will be enough to come back to a frozen/BSOD. So it seems like there's some sort of internal clock where the longer my system goes without a crash, the more sensitive it will be for a crash.

What sort of programs do you know of (besides screensaver or hibernation) that kick in after several hours of inactivity?

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Nobody's in a hurry. Take a good pic of the blue screen and post it.

And, after that, do set the system to create a system dump or minidump on crash, and disable the auto-reboot feature, although it doesn't seem to be kicking in, in your case, so that we can get a crash dump on the crash following the next one.

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do set the system to create a system dump or minidump on crash, and disable the auto-reboot feature, although it doesn't seem to be kicking in, in your case, so that we can get a crash dump on the crash following the next one.

Very well...how exactly do I do this?

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I suppose I won't be able to provide that until it happens again.

Any time you get a BSOD, there will be an event regarding it in Event Viewer.

What is it called in the event viewer? Is it under system or application? And is it yellow (warning), red (error), or white?

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upload at least the dmp files from the folder C:\Windows\Minidump or better the large dump (memory.dmp) from C:\Windows

I don't have memory.dmp, but I have found the mini dump. Not sure if you meant I should attach it to a post, but if you did, I am not allowed to do so.

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do set the system to create a system dump or minidump on crash, and disable the auto-reboot feature, although it doesn't seem to be kicking in, in your case, so that we can get a crash dump on the crash following the next one.

Very well...how exactly do I do this?

Right-click on "My Computer", select "Properties" -> "Advanced", go to "Startup and Recovery" and click on "Settings", go to "System Failure", select the "Write an event to the system log" and deselect both "Send an administrative alert" and "Automatically restart", then go to the box below "Write debugging information" and select "Small memory dump (64KB)" for a minidump or "Kernel memory dump" for a full dump. Click "OK", then "OK". Let's start with minidumps.

Now, even minidumps are too large to attach. So upload them somewhere like uploadade.to or megaupload and post the link to it here.

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What is it called in the event viewer? Is it under system or application? And is it yellow (warning), red (error), or white?

Its probably under system. It will be either Yellow or Red. Just look through them, if you see something suspicious, post what it says even if it isn't what we are looking for.

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OK here's a copy of the last BSOD:

A problem has been detected and Windows has been shut down to prevent damage

to your computer.

The problem seems to be caused by the following file: ntoskrnl.exe

CRITICAL_OBJECT_TERMINATION

If this is the first time you've seen this stop error screen,

restart your computer. If this screen appears again, follow

these steps:

Check to make sure any new hardware or software is properly installed.

If this is a new installation, ask your hardware or software manufacturer

for any Windows updates you might need.

If problems continue, disable or remove any newly installed hardware

or software. Disable BIOS memory options such as caching or shadowing.

If you need to use safe mode to remove or disable components, restart

your computer, press F8 to select Advanced Startup Options, and then

select Safe Mode.

Technical Information:

*** STOP: 0x000000f4 (0x00000003, 0x8ad8a690, 0x8ad8a804, 0x805d2970)

*** ntoskrnl.exe - Address 0x804f9f33 base at 0x804d7000 DateStamp 0x4802516a

I hope that helps you out...it seems ntoskrnl.exe is the culprit. Any ideas? Thanks for all your help gentlemen, it's truly appreciated.

Shant

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