Question BSOD 0x119, dxgmms2.sys

Jan 22, 2024
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Hello everyone,
After trying literally everything that is in my power I gave up. Im constantly having problem with my 3 MO pc turning off after waking up from the sleep. First it starts lagging ( visible mouse lags ) and after a minute or two later on PC is restarting by itself. I've done a lot of things, i've turned off MCR of my RAM, changed its mhz from 6400 to 6200 and later on to 6000. I've also installed the newest bios version for my motherboard, reinstalled graphic drivers with DDU and install the drivers from my graphics card manufacturer. Fast startup is also turned off, minimal processor power managment is set to 5%. The only this that i've changed at the beginning is that in the BIOS i've set up Eco mode 105w for my Ryzen 7950x. The problem only occurs after waking up and it doing it so randomly, sometimes once per 3 days, sometimes once in 2 days etc. Additionaly i've turned off automatic startup for MSI Afterburner. Gaming and game dev work is not affected by this, it restarts only after waking up, after it restart everything works fine. The temperatures of my components are fine as well ( both when idling and while working/gaming)

my setup
Windows 11 Home 64-bit
AMD Ryzen 9 7950X 16-Core Processor
ROG STRIX X670E-F GAMING WIFI (AM5)
Gainward NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090 Phantom
Samsung SSD 980 PRO with Heatsink 2TB (SSD)
ENDORFY Navis F360 3x120mm
Corsair 64GB (2x32GB) 6400MHz CL32 Vengeance
Straight Power 12 1000W 80 Plus Platinum ATX 3.0
nvidia drivers : 546.33

Im counting on you ppl, maybe you will figure something out

https://drive.google.com/file/d/17drvb7grC2Rap7JHX7Uto-qmKMR4yCwD/view?usp=sharing
Link for speccy snapshot and dump file

VIDEO_SCHEDULER_INTERNAL_ERROR (119)
The video scheduler has detected that fatal violation has occurred. This resulted
in a condition that video scheduler can no longer progress. Any other values after
parameter 1 must be individually examined according to the subtype.
Arguments:
Arg1: 0000000000000002, The driver failed upon the submission of a command.
Arg2: ffffffffc000000d
Arg3: fffffd0aa1b472a0
Arg4: ffffd10e2230a160

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SYMBOL_NAME: dxgmms2!VidSchiSendToExecutionQueue+1bf4a

MODULE_NAME: dxgmms2

IMAGE_NAME: dxgmms2.sys

IMAGE_VERSION: 10.0.22621.1254

STACK_COMMAND: .cxr; .ecxr ; kb

BUCKET_ID_FUNC_OFFSET: 1bf4a

FAILURE_BUCKET_ID: 0x119_2_DRIVER_FAILED_SUBMIT_COMMAND_dxgmms2!VidSchiSendToExecutionQueue

OSPLATFORM_TYPE: x64

OSNAME: Windows 10

FAILURE_ID_HASH: {9a11bf9c-270e-962e-7a82-3efdab93c10e}


Cheers,
Adam
 
Last edited:
The problem here is either a faulty graphics card or a faulty graphics driver. The dump shows that the BSOD happened because an invalid parameter was passed, either from the driver or from the card. We know this from the 0xC000000D in the dump.

The version of the graphics driver (nvlddmkm.sys) that you have installed is recent, dating from December 2023...
Code:
6: kd> lmvm nvlddmkm
Browse full module list
start             end                 module name
fffff801`8a510000 fffff801`8de2d000   nvlddmkm T (no symbols)           
    Loaded symbol image file: nvlddmkm.sys
    Image path: nvlddmkm.sys
    Image name: nvlddmkm.sys
    Browse all global symbols  functions  data
    Timestamp:        Wed Dec  6 20:23:29 2023 (6570BC21)
    CheckSum:         038052EB
    ImageSize:        0391D000
    Translations:     0000.04b0 0000.04e4 0409.04b0 0409.04e4
    Information from resource tables:
However, there is a more recent driver version dated 17th Jan 2024 on the Nvidia website.

Your best course of action is to do the following...
  • Download the latest driver and the two immediately prior versions (even if one of them is the one you're running) from the Nvidia website (do not use GeForce Experience at all).
  • Then download DDU.
  • Use DDU to fully uninstall the current driver (the system will reboot) and then manually install the latest driver version.
  • If it BSODs then use DDU to uninstall the current driver (the system will reboot) and then manually install the immediately prior version of the driver.
  • If it BSODs then use DDU to uninstall the current driver (the system will reboot) and then manually install the two level back version of the driver.
  • If it BSODs on all three of the latest driver versions, with DDU used in between, then the issue is almost certainly with the graphics card. That can only be proven by swap testing it.
 
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Reactions: Bolonidas
@zinkles i've tried both of them, nothing wrong came out.
@ubuysa I used to have the newest drivers version for my GPU ( downloaded from nvidia, without geforce experience but the issue still occured, thats why i've tried to download the drivers from my manufacturer card, but i will try your way of doing that with DDU. Another thing worth to mention is that when I boot my PC im not able to enter BIOS , i have to do it from the Windows 11 recovery tab.
 
@ubuysa ive done what you have told me to also. Another thing worth to mention is that my PC is booting around 1 minute or so and it always starts with DRAM diode lighting with orange color for around 50 sec. After 50 sec the light is gone. The whole boot sequence lasts for 1 minute
 
As I said, if you get BSODs after trying the three most recent graphics driver versions, with DDU in between each, then you're almost certainly looking at a graphics card issue. Swap testing is the only way to confirm that importunately.

A slow boot can be for a great many reasons, and you have 64GB of RAM which will take longer to enumerate. If you have Windows Fast Startup enabled then disable it - you don't need it.

It's not uncommon to find that you can only get into the BIOS via Windows.