Machine Check Error Has Occured
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A Corrected Hardware Error Has Occurred Internal Parity Error
index Hardware General Hardware A corrected hardware error has occurred. Moderators: mac_h8r1, Nemesis Post Reply Print view 1 2 3 Kougar Silver subscriber Graphmaster Gerbil Topic Author Posts: 1387 Joined: Tue Dec 02, 2008 2:12 am Location: Texas A corrected hardware error has occurred. Quote #1 Sat Feb 15, 2014 3:02 pm Those familiar with Haswell overclocking should be familiar with the title, it's a common event log error that cache hierarchy error indicates the processor detected and corrected an error that otherwise would've led to a BSoD. I saw this frequently during my trials and tribulations when OCing my 4770K... but now I have a real puzzler. I'm getting this error on a Core i7 4771 processor. Hence there is zero OCing going on.A corrected hardware error has occurred.Reported by component: Processor CoreError Source: Corrected Machine CheckError Type: Internal parity errorProcessor ID: 4The details view of this entry contains further information.Is anyone an expert with this errors that knows what's going on? Could this possibly indicate an error detected in the RAM, or is it a CPU cache error? Memtest & prime don't find any issues as this error is fairly rare, but I've noted a few other instances in the event logs. Top notfred Maximum Gerbil Posts: 4205 Joined: Tue Aug 10, 2004 10:10 am Location: Ottawa, Canada Re: A corrected hardware error has occurred. Quote #2 Mon Feb 17, 2014 2:54 pm If you grab the details of the entry then there are a bunch of websites that have Machine Check Exception decoder details around. That should point at processor or memory. Also check your PSU is feeding everything with enough juice. Top Kougar Silver subscriber Graphmaster Ger
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Whea Logger Event Id 17 A Corrected Hardware Error Has Occurred
Macintoshian Achaia Programmer's Symposium The Server Room Ars Lykaion Gaming, Extra Strength Caplets The Lounge The Soap Box whea logger event 1 The Boardroom The Observatory Ars Help & Feedback Ars Subscription Member Areas Image Galleries Memory "Corrected Machine Check" 7 posts blargh "Manual Labor" Ars Legatus Legionis et Subscriptor Tribus: Redwood City, CA Registered: https://techreport.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=92752 Aug 7, 2001Posts: 11982 Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2012 4:03 am An excerpt from the event log on my desktop system running Windows 7 x64:Quote:Warning: Event 47, WHEA-LoggerA corrected hardware error has occurred.Component: MemoryError Source: Corrected Machine CheckDetails: EventData: PhysicalAddress 0x7f2eb6b0 That's... probably not good, is it? Particularly if such events have been showing up regularly (always the same PhysicalAddress, it appears) for the past 6 months or more?The motherboard is a Tyan S2892; RAM is http://arstechnica.com/civis/viewtopic.php?t=1185575 (checks files from when the system was built in 2005) "Crucial 512MB PC3200 DDR 400MHz ECC Registered Memory".Is this a sign of ECC RAM saving my bacon? Time to track down some replacement RAM, or for a new system altogether? tijo Ars Scholae Palatinae Registered: Oct 9, 2012Posts: 1107 Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2012 10:18 am Time to run diagnostics on your RAM i would say. For non ECC, i memtest is a good utility, i don't know if it works with ECC memory too, but i'll bet it does. If it does, download it, make a bootable disc/usb with it and let it run for a good 24h, if anything is amiss, you'll know.That is what i would do with consumer components, never had to check any ECC memory since i don't have that kind of hardware so take what i say with a grain of salt. Drizzt321 Ars Tribunus Angusticlavius et Subscriptor Tribus: Los Angeles, CA Registered: Dec 22, 2003Posts: 7170 Posted: Mon Oct 29, 2012 6:41 pm I believe that, yes, it's a sign your ECC memory is saving your bacon. It detected an error, and corrected it. I'd say if it's always in the same spot, or even always on the same stick of memory, it's time to replace that stick of memory. Hat Monster Ars Legatus Legionis Tribus: Yorkshi
{Name}\r\n\t\t \r\n\t\t\t {Groups}\r\n\t\t \r\n\t\t \r\n\t ","t2GroupHtmlBlock":"{Item}","viewAllHtmlBlock":"{Text}","linkHtmlBlock":"{Name}","searchResultItemHtmlBlock":"{Name}","viewMoreText":"and {MoreText} more..."}}; $(document).ready(function() { Core_GroupNavigation_SetMenuItems("#ctl00_ctl00_header_fragment_668884188__cde9f5_ctl00_ctl00_ParentGroupListContainer", true, "ParentMoreListheader-fragment-668884188"); }); $(window).resize(function() { Core_GroupNavigation_SetMenuItems("#ctl00_ctl00_header_fragment_668884188__cde9f5_ctl00_ctl00_ParentGroupListContainer", true, "ParentMoreListheader-fragment-668884188"); https://social.technet.microsoft.com/wiki/contents/articles/3567.event-id-18-microsoft-windows-whea-logger.aspx }); // ]]> Post an article Translate this https://communities.intel.com/thread/56283 page Powered by Microsoft® Translator Wikis - Page Details First published by Greg Marshall_exMSFT When: 28 Jun 2011 1:30 PM Last revision by Ed Price - MSFT (Microsoft) When: 28 Jun 2013 5:00 PM Revisions: error has 7 Comments: 2 Options Subscribe to Article (RSS) Share this Engage! Wiki Ninjas Blog (Announcements) Wiki Ninjas on Twitter TechNet Wiki Discussion Forum Can You Improve This Article? Positively! Click Sign In to add the tip, solution, correction or comment that will help other a corrected hardware users.Report inappropriate content using these instructions. Wiki > TechNet Articles > Event ID 18: Microsoft-Windows-WHEA-Logger Event ID 18: Microsoft-Windows-WHEA-Logger Article History Event ID 18: Microsoft-Windows-WHEA-Logger Table of Contents Applies to:DetailsExplanationUser ActionRelated Information Applies to: Windows Server 2008, Windows Vista, Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows 7 Details Product: Windows Operating System Event ID: 18 Source: Microsoft-Windows-WHEA-Logger Version: 6.1 Symbolic Name: Boot Performance Monitoring Message: A fatal hardware error has occurred. Reported by component: Processor Core Error Source: Machine Check Exception Error Type: Unknown Error Processor ID: 1 The details view of this entry contains further information. Explanation This error indicates that there is a hardware problem. A machine check exception indicatesa computer hardware error that occurs when a computer's central processing unit detects a hardware problem. Note: WHEA stands for Windows
work correctly without it enabled. Please turn JavaScript back on and reload this page. Please enter a title. You can not post a blank message. Please type your message and try again. More discussions in Processors All PlacesSupport CommunityProcessors 3 Replies Latest reply on Oct 29, 2014 7:39 AM by inteluser462 WHEA Event ID 19 CPU-corrected hw error / i5 4690 inteluser462 Oct 23, 2014 3:16 AM Dear Members, I found the error below in Event Viewer. Should I change something in UEFI? (memory profile, speedstep, filter PLL?) No BSODs, only 9 warnings after 8 days. When last time occured only downloaded a cd, maybe did sha1 calc, no gaming or other intensive task. MciStat 0x90000040000f0005 Found something: Vol. 3B 16-3 INTERPRETING MACHINE-CHECK ERROR CODES Table 16-4. Incremental Bus Error Codes of Machine Check for Processors Based on Intel Core Microarchitecture Bus queue request type error bits 19-24 000001 for BQ_PREF_READ_TYPE error But what does this mean? google "BQ_PREF_READ_TYPE" -> nothing Is it important? Helps to determine the source of the problem? source: http://www.intel.com/content/dam/www...t-2-manual.pdf CPU tested with: Intel Processor Diagnostic Tool -> all passed In Event Viewer: A corrected hardware error has occurred. Reported by component: Processor Core Error Source: Corrected Machine Check Error Type: internal parity error(not my image)http://cdn.overclock.net/c/c3/c301c13f_WHEA-ParityError.PNG ErrorSource 1 ApicId 4 MCABank 0 MciStat 0x90000040000f0005 MciAddr 0x0 MciMisc 0x0 ErrorType 12 TransactionType 256 Participation 256 RequestType 256 MemorIO 256 MemHierarchyLvl 256 Timeout 256 OperationType 256 Channel 256 UEFI settings here: (white lines: AUTO, Speedstep: enabled) http://www.kephost.com/images/2014/1...0141022668.jpg http://www.kephost.com/images/2014/1...0141022669.jpg http://www.kephost.com/images/2014/1...0141022670.jpg http://www.kephost.com/images/2014/1...0141022671.jpg http://www.kephost.com/images/2014/1...0141022672