JSI Tip 0726. Prepare for your next Blue Screen
September 21, 1998
Being prepared for your next Blue Screen bugcheck will make problem resloution a lot easier.
1. Use Control Panel / System / Startup... and check Write an event to the system log.
Here is a sample of an event message generated from a bugcheck
Event ID: 1001 Source: Save Dump Description: The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was : 0xc000021a (0xe1270188, 0x00000001, 0x00000000, 0x00000000). Microsoft Windows NT (v15.1381). A dump was saved in: C:WINNTMEMORY.DMP.
2. Obtain Dumpchk.exe from the SP3 CD-ROM or download it. Before running dumpchk.exe, open the command prompt and
right click the title. Choose Properties / Layout and set the Screen Buffer Size Height to 999.
To run dumpchk.exe, type: dumpchk.exe memory.dmp
The most relevant information displayed will repeat the stop code and parameters, in addition to the ExceptionAddress
MachineImageType i386 NumberProcessors 1 BugCheckCode 0xc000021a BugCheckParameter1 0xe1270188 BugCheckParameter2 0x00000001 BugCheckParameter3 0x00000000 BugCheckParameter4 0x00000000 ExceptionCode 0x80000003 ExceptionFlags 0x00000001 ExceptionAddress 0x8014fb84
3. Use Pstat from the Reskit Supplement Two to identify the ModuleName whose Load Addr is just lower than the
ExceptionAddress. In this example, it is Ntoskrnl.exe
ModuleName Load Addr Code Data Paged LinkDate ------------------------------------------------------------------------- ntoskrnl.exe 80100000 270272 40064 434816 Sun May 11 00:10:39 1997 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4. You can now go to the Knowledge Base an search for an article that mimicks your situation.
Note: Not all bugchecks will display all this information.
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