Re: IRQ BSOD
- From: aldago <aldago@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 5 Dec 2008 19:23:01 -0800
Thanks guys. I'm trying all the things mentioned. So far I shut down my
machine with a restart so that I could get the bsod. I in fact got the bsod,
shut the computer down, then booted without a problem and checked the Event
Viewer error messages and I got two warnings and two errors.
The Warnings were as follows:
Windows saved user ALSEMACHINE\Owner registry while an application or
service was still using the registry during log off. The memory used by the
user's registry has not been freed. The registry will be unloaded when it is
no longer in use.
This is often caused by services running as a user account, try configuring
the services to run in either the LocalService or NetworkService account.
Windows cannot unload your classes registry file - it is still in use by
other applications or services.
The file will be unloaded when it is no longer in use.
The Errors were:
The following boot-start or system-start driver(s) failed to load:
szkg
The SonicWALL NetExtender Service service failed to start due to the
following error:
The system cannot find the file specified.
I took care of the NetExtender problem. That program is uninstalled
including whatever was in the registry. This didn't solve the problem.
What I don't know how to do is configure the services to run in either the
Local Service or NetworkService account. Can anyone walk me through it? I'm
about to go through the resolutions proposed in the Microsoft Knowledge Base
Article 314063.
"Gerry" wrote:
.
Make sure all your fans are working and the computer is free of dust.
Use an Air Duster to remove dust. Overheating could be the problem.
Background information on Stop Error message
http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms793589.aspx
0x0000000A: IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
Typically due to a bad driver, or faulty or incompatible hardware or
software. Use the General Troubleshooting of STOP Messages checklist
above. Technically, this error condition means that a kernel-mode
process or driver tried to access a memory location to which it did not
have permission, or at a kernel Interrupt ReQuest Level (IRQL) that was
too high. (A kernel-mode process can access only other processes that
have an IRQL lower than, or equal to, its own.)
Source: http://aumha.org/a/stop.htm
You receive a "Stop 0x0000000A" error message in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314063/
There are a lot of practical suggestions in the Knowledge Base Article
314063
Are there any yellow question marks in Device Manager? Right click on
the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties,
Hardware,Device Manager. If yes what is the Device Error code?
What exactly do you have by way of a Windows XP CD?
What is your computer make and model?
--
Hope this helps.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
aldago wrote:
I've started getting a bsod with the message "irq_less_or_not_equal"
when I reboot my computer but everything is fine when I boot from a
cold start. I researched the message on Google and found out that it
could be a faulty memory problem or a driver conflict problem.
Microsoft says that most of the time this error comes from a
conflict. I ran memtest86 and the memory seems ok. I'd like to avoid
a complete reinstall of Windows or deleting all of my software to see
where the conflict lies (could it be the security updates?). Does
anyone know have any suggestions for tracking down the conflict?
Computer Info:
Emachine T3506
Total Physical Memory: 1.5Gb
DIMM 1 512 MB Speed 400 (oem)
DIMM 2 1024 MB Speed 400
Windows XP Home SP2
3.2 GHz Intel Celeron
120Gb Hard Drive
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