BSOD Windows 10
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BSOD Windows 10
Hi all,
I'm fairly certain there is no link between my issues and F@H, but I wanted to check here, just to rule it out.
I have been getting BSOD on my Windows 10 laptop that I use for folding. It hasn't really started as soon as I started folding, but I'm checking all possibilities of recent changes in software etc.
The stop code I get is 0xa0000006, which according to Google, possibly indicates a virus infection. Yet my antivirus software comes up with nothing.
Has anyone been having these same troubles while using F@H? As I said, I find it very unlikely, but I am looking for the source of the problem by elimination...
Thanks!
I'm fairly certain there is no link between my issues and F@H, but I wanted to check here, just to rule it out.
I have been getting BSOD on my Windows 10 laptop that I use for folding. It hasn't really started as soon as I started folding, but I'm checking all possibilities of recent changes in software etc.
The stop code I get is 0xa0000006, which according to Google, possibly indicates a virus infection. Yet my antivirus software comes up with nothing.
Has anyone been having these same troubles while using F@H? As I said, I find it very unlikely, but I am looking for the source of the problem by elimination...
Thanks!
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Windows 10 64-bit
CPU:2/3/4/6 -> Intel i7-6700K
GPU:1 -> Nvidia GTX 1080 Ti
§
Retired:
2x Nvidia GTX 1070
Nvidia GTX 675M
Nvidia GTX 660 Ti
Nvidia GTX 650 SC
Nvidia GTX 260 896 MB SOC
Nvidia 9600GT 1 GB OC
Nvidia 9500M GS
Nvidia 8800GTS 320 MB
Intel Core i7-860
Intel Core i7-3840QM
Intel i3-3240
Intel Core 2 Duo E8200
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Re: BSOD Windows 10
When I encountered a BSOD on my laptop, it was due to a failing GPU. Normally, it would work fine but since F@H can push the GPU to its limits, it can expose any flaws.
Just to double check, can you please post your log file. Ensure that you have copied the System configuration which is present at the start of the log file (viewtopic.php?f=61&t=26036).
Just to double check, can you please post your log file. Ensure that you have copied the System configuration which is present at the start of the log file (viewtopic.php?f=61&t=26036).
ETA:
Now ↞ Very Soon ↔ Soon ↔ Soon-ish ↔ Not Soon ↠ End Of Time
Welcome To The F@H Support Forum Ӂ Troubleshooting Bad WUs Ӂ Troubleshooting Server Connectivity Issues
Now ↞ Very Soon ↔ Soon ↔ Soon-ish ↔ Not Soon ↠ End Of Time
Welcome To The F@H Support Forum Ӂ Troubleshooting Bad WUs Ӂ Troubleshooting Server Connectivity Issues
Re: BSOD Windows 10
I've made that same experience over the years, it was normally bad drivers or a failing GPU / memory.PantherX wrote:When I encountered a BSOD on my laptop, it was due to a failing GPU. Normally, it would work fine but since F@H can push the GPU to its limits, it can expose any flaws.
You could also try to run a stress test program like furmark, to a) see if that also causes bluescreens and/or b) if there are visible artifacts in 3d models rendered by your card, which can also point to issues with the card itself.
CPU: Ryzen 9 3900X (1x21 CPUs) ~ GPU: nVidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super (Asus)
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Re: BSOD Windows 10
Okay thanks for your replies.
Funny enough, I just had it again (for the first time in over a day, it's very irregular) and I was only folding on CPU at that time.
Because it's a unexpected shutdown, I can't access the log files? (Unless I'm not looking in the right place?)
I will look into the Furmark thing.
Funny enough, I just had it again (for the first time in over a day, it's very irregular) and I was only folding on CPU at that time.
Because it's a unexpected shutdown, I can't access the log files? (Unless I'm not looking in the right place?)
I will look into the Furmark thing.
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- Site Moderator
- Posts: 6986
- Joined: Wed Dec 23, 2009 9:33 am
- Hardware configuration: V7.6.21 -> Multi-purpose 24/7
Windows 10 64-bit
CPU:2/3/4/6 -> Intel i7-6700K
GPU:1 -> Nvidia GTX 1080 Ti
§
Retired:
2x Nvidia GTX 1070
Nvidia GTX 675M
Nvidia GTX 660 Ti
Nvidia GTX 650 SC
Nvidia GTX 260 896 MB SOC
Nvidia 9600GT 1 GB OC
Nvidia 9500M GS
Nvidia 8800GTS 320 MB
Intel Core i7-860
Intel Core i7-3840QM
Intel i3-3240
Intel Core 2 Duo E8200
Intel Core 2 Duo E6550
Intel Core 2 Duo T8300
Intel Pentium E5500
Intel Pentium E5400 - Location: Land Of The Long White Cloud
- Contact:
Re: BSOD Windows 10
the client maintains a history of logs. By default, it stores the last 16 logs. Here's the default location on my system, to help you locate the folder:
C:\Users\PantherX-H\AppData\Roaming\FAHClient\logs
C:\Users\PantherX-H\AppData\Roaming\FAHClient\logs
ETA:
Now ↞ Very Soon ↔ Soon ↔ Soon-ish ↔ Not Soon ↠ End Of Time
Welcome To The F@H Support Forum Ӂ Troubleshooting Bad WUs Ӂ Troubleshooting Server Connectivity Issues
Now ↞ Very Soon ↔ Soon ↔ Soon-ish ↔ Not Soon ↠ End Of Time
Welcome To The F@H Support Forum Ӂ Troubleshooting Bad WUs Ӂ Troubleshooting Server Connectivity Issues
Re: BSOD Windows 10
the path
%AppData%\FAHClient\logs
is the default path -- you should be able to copy/paste that into the Start -> Run box and it will open right into the logs directory
%AppData%\FAHClient\logs
is the default path -- you should be able to copy/paste that into the Start -> Run box and it will open right into the logs directory
Re: BSOD Windows 10
I have no opinion regarding a possible virus, but that would not be my first guess. Be aware that FAH is designed to use ALL of the unused computer resoruces that you're willing to donat. This tends to create more heat than the computer would if it was just waiting for you to type something or to move the mouse.
You mentioned a laptop and traditionally, the performance of a laptop is limited by the amount of heat that the tiny little fan can dissipate. Be sure to plot the dust out of the passages where the air moves the heat. Also, consider reducing FAH's setting enough that the temperature is lowered by enough to rule out heat as opposed to other causes of BSODs.
If you need help with the FAH settings, just ask.
You mentioned a laptop and traditionally, the performance of a laptop is limited by the amount of heat that the tiny little fan can dissipate. Be sure to plot the dust out of the passages where the air moves the heat. Also, consider reducing FAH's setting enough that the temperature is lowered by enough to rule out heat as opposed to other causes of BSODs.
If you need help with the FAH settings, just ask.
Posting FAH's log:
How to provide enough info to get helpful support.
How to provide enough info to get helpful support.
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Re: BSOD Windows 10
Theres a program called whocrashed which analyses the BSOD crash dumps and tells you what was the trigger for the BSOD.
I used it before to find which driver was causing me issues. GPU in my case.
It can be found here https://www.resplendence.com/whocrashed
I used it before to find which driver was causing me issues. GPU in my case.
It can be found here https://www.resplendence.com/whocrashed
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- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2020 10:52 am
Re: BSOD Windows 10
I had not seen a BSOD since Windows 98 or so hahabruce wrote:I have no opinion regarding a possible virus, but that would not be my first guess. Be aware that FAH is designed to use ALL of the unused computer resoruces that you're willing to donat. This tends to create more heat than the computer would if it was just waiting for you to type something or to move the mouse.
You mentioned a laptop and traditionally, the performance of a laptop is limited by the amount of heat that the tiny little fan can dissipate. Be sure to plot the dust out of the passages where the air moves the heat. Also, consider reducing FAH's setting enough that the temperature is lowered by enough to rule out heat as opposed to other causes of BSODs.
If you need help with the FAH settings, just ask.
It's a brand new laptop, so dust shouldn't be much of a problem. It has however shut down due to overheating before, but that was without BSOD.
Thanks for the help, I have been reading into settings as well, but I tend to pause the whole thing for 15 minutes if it gets hot. Luckily, as I have a gaming laptop, it has pretty decent fans.
Oh coll, I will definitely use this. I've already deleted all the dump files, but I'm guessing it will happen again pretty soon.confused.brit wrote:Theres a program called whocrashed which analyses the BSOD crash dumps and tells you what was the trigger for the BSOD.
I used it before to find which driver was causing me issues. GPU in my case.
It can be found here https://www.resplendence.com/whocrashed
The suggestion that it has to do with the GPU has allowed me to conduct more detailed searches and I've found similar stories for my exact type of laptop on the manufacturer's user forum. It seems to involve a problem with GPU drivers. A sort of mismatch between AMD and MSI, apparently. The people there solved it by upgrading the BIOS, so I guess I'll start reading into how I do that... =)
Thanks again to everyone that answered here. I've hung out on forums of all sorts in the past ten-ish years and most of them have died out or turned into sarcastic hellholes for newbies. It's amazing to see how everyone just wants to help here!
Re: BSOD Windows 10
Got a brand new laptop here too, can't use it to fold with CPU and GPU at the same time, the constant GPU load simply generates too much heat. In GPU-Z, I could see "Thrm" as PerfCap reason... shape.
Someone recently linked a little device that would plug into a USB port and actively help suck heat/air through the ventilation slots of the laptop, if I can find the thread again or if the person who posted it remembers, that might be an option.
Someone recently linked a little device that would plug into a USB port and actively help suck heat/air through the ventilation slots of the laptop, if I can find the thread again or if the person who posted it remembers, that might be an option.
CPU: Ryzen 9 3900X (1x21 CPUs) ~ GPU: nVidia GeForce GTX 1660 Super (Asus)
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Re: BSOD Windows 10
Just a small update here.
I downloaded the Whocrashed tool and it gave me some useful information. Issue was indeed GPU related. FAH was not to blame, however, as suggested, higher workload probably did make the crashes occur more often.
I finally managed to update the drivers for the GPU, with a new release from 2 days ago and it has been stable since then. To be fair, I haven't been getting many GPU WUs, but so far, so good.
I downloaded the Whocrashed tool and it gave me some useful information. Issue was indeed GPU related. FAH was not to blame, however, as suggested, higher workload probably did make the crashes occur more often.
I finally managed to update the drivers for the GPU, with a new release from 2 days ago and it has been stable since then. To be fair, I haven't been getting many GPU WUs, but so far, so good.