Blue Screen Error Logs Windows Xp
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Blue Screen Error Windows Xp Fix
with us Super User Questions Tags Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Super User is a question windows xp blue screen error unmountable boot volume and answer site for computer enthusiasts and power users. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask windows xp blue screen error codes a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Where are Blue Screen of Death events logged on Windows XP and how can I view the history of them? up vote 9 down vote favorite
Windows Xp Blue Screen Error On Startup
3 I got a Blue Screen Of Death on reboot. Where are events like this logged on Windows XP and how can I view the history of the BSODs? windows-xp logging bsod share|improve this question edited Nov 25 '11 at 17:08 slhck 125k38312360 asked Jun 2 '10 at 15:47 user39966 2441314 migrated from stackoverflow.com Jun 2 '10 at 16:07 This question came from our site for professional and enthusiast programmers. See also superuser.com/questions/42386/… –ChrisF Nov 25 '11 at 17:11 add a comment|
How To Solve Blue Screen Error In Windows Xp
6 Answers 6 active oldest votes up vote 6 down vote accepted Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Event Viewer share|improve this answer answered Jun 2 '10 at 15:49 Alistair 1841 2 Win+R -> type eventvwr -> ENTER :) –0xC0000022L Nov 25 '11 at 18:32 9 A description of where to check for events causing the BSOD would be relevant. –Norswap Aug 25 '13 at 10:42 add a comment| up vote 10 down vote BlueScreenView by Nirsoft is a much better solution than Event Viewer; Event Viewer does work, but this provides the information in a better format and much faster. share|improve this answer edited Aug 4 at 16:34 oldmud0 2,61421030 answered Nov 25 '11 at 9:13 JohannesM 595616 add a comment| up vote 3 down vote In Windows XP/2000/NT4, sort the System event log by the 'Source' heading. Look for an event source of SaveDump. In Vista/7/8 look for BugCheck. There will be a status code that you can look up, such as 0xC0000050. Change the C to a 0 before searching it on the web. share|improve this answer answered Jan 12 '12 at 23:39 Robert Fulton 311 add a comment| up vote 1 down vote If you have your pc set to capture minidumps, you can try Who Crashed, it automates looking for some of the common causes of BSODs. share|improve this answer answered Jun 2 '10 at 18:28 Millhouse 596210 add a comment| up vote 0 down vote If the event log doesn't help (whic
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(עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語) HomeWindows 10Windows 10 MobilePrevious versionsMDOPSurfaceSurface HubLibraryForums Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Answered by: BSOD error log location Windows 7 IT Pro > Windows 7 Miscellaneous Question 0 https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windows/en-US/a5ebab26-61ef-42a4-a2bb-0fc60ad45385/bsod-error-log-location?forum=w7itprogeneral Sign in to vote I have a couple computers that are getting blue screens on Win7. When I check the event logs, it shows that it shut down unexpectedly, but there isn't a "Save http://www.howtogeek.com/forum/topic/windowx-xp-blue-screen-immediately-after-user-login Dump" option like in XP. Where are the STOP codes saved in Win7? Thursday, April 14, 2011 6:21 PM Reply | Quote Answers 0 Sign in to vote I checked in Event Viewer blue screen > Windows Logs > System, the same place where it showed up in Win XP. I have the WinDbg program and have checked out the dump file myself so I know what the issue is. What I'm trying to say though, is It was easier in XP to look quickly at the event viewer and see the stop code and a quick description. It was easier than either blue screen error having to setup the debugger, or uploading them here or to other forums, and I'm not sure why it was removed from Windows. Marked as answer by Sabrina Shen Thursday, April 21, 2011 2:30 AM Wednesday, April 20, 2011 10:53 AM Reply | Quote All replies 1 Sign in to vote Check in (%systemroot%\minidumps like c:\windows\minidumps). Use Microsoft Skydrive to upload dump files and I will check them for you. If you want to debug dump files without my help, use Windbg. This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties or guarantees , and confers no rights. Microsoft Student Partner Microsoft Certified Professional Microsoft Certified Systems Administrator: Security Microsoft Certified Systems Engineer: Security Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist: Windows Server 2008 Active Directory, Configuration Microsoft Certified Technology Specialist: Windows Server 2008 Network Infrastructure, Configuration Proposed as answer by Matthew Carrington Tuesday, November 19, 2013 6:50 PM Thursday, April 14, 2011 9:45 PM Reply | Quote 1 Sign in to vote Hi, Please perform System Restore to the point when the issue hadn’t been occurring. After that, you may test this issue in Clean Boot and Safe Mode to determine the possible cause. If it works fine in Clean
The How-To Geek Forums Have Migrated to Discourse How-To Geek Forums / Windows XP (Solved) - Windowx XP Blue Screen immediately after user login (5 posts) Started 5 years ago by CantLoginWinXP Latest reply from CantLoginWinXP Topic Viewed 6224 times CantLoginWinXP Posts: 4 This post has been reported. I'm using Windows XP Professional, Service Pack 2. I do not have windows backup/recovery enabled, so I unfortunately can not just restore a previous backup. I am able to login as Safe Mode so I'd guess it's not a hardware issue. My computer worked fine last night, i did not instal any new software/updates yesterday and I shut down my computer normally, then this issue came up when I turned my computer on this morning. My computer boots up fine until it gets to the Windows screen to choose which user to login as. Once I choose one it crashes within 1-2 seconds after I type my password and hit enter. It just says "Loading user data..." or whatever then crash. At this point it was previously rebooting, but I logged in as Safe Mode and disabled the "reboot on crash" thing so that I get a blue screen instead. My blue screen says the usual stuff about "a problem was detected... blah blah" then: "Technical information: *** STOP: 0x0000008E (0xC0000005, 0xF82B55D5, 0xF820D788, 0x0000000) *** Ntfs.sys - Address F82B55D5 base at F82B5000, DateStamp 4198e35b Beginning dump of physical memory Physical memory dump complete." One note about this blue screen, in the line "*** STOP: ..." the number 0xF820D788 is different everytime it crashes, otherwise the entry is the same When I login with Safe Mode and check the Event Viewer (Control Panels --> Administrative Tools --> Computer Management), it has an entry for each crash: Event ID: 1001 Type: Information Source: Save Dump Description: "The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x0000008E (0xC0000005, 0xF82B55D5, 0xF820D788, 0x0000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\Minidump\Mini120710-10.dmp" I don't know how to read the .dmp files (i tried opening in notepad but it was just random characters), so that was a dead end for me. My failed attempts at fixing it from Safe Mode follow: 1) I ran a virus scanner (that I downloaded from Avira.com) and deleted a couple of ran