All,
Aorus x570 Pro Wifi (I believe V1.0 hardware), running BIOS F11
Ryzen 3800X -- stock, no overclocking or anything
I'm about 80% done with a new PC migration. The Mobo / CPU / RAM / PSU are a few months old while the GPU / drives / case / fans are considerably older. Everything was running perfectly in Windows 10 v1909.
Since the v2004 update, I'm getting slammed with a lot of BSOD within 15 seconds of wakeup from sleep. Errors include:
Actions taken so far have been very simple:
Also, given that stability seems perfect other than in returning from sleep, is there something I can tweak in Windows or the BIOS in sleep/wake settings that might alleviate this? (Beyond defeating sleep altogether, I mean.)
A
Aorus x570 Pro Wifi (I believe V1.0 hardware), running BIOS F11
Ryzen 3800X -- stock, no overclocking or anything
I'm about 80% done with a new PC migration. The Mobo / CPU / RAM / PSU are a few months old while the GPU / drives / case / fans are considerably older. Everything was running perfectly in Windows 10 v1909.
Since the v2004 update, I'm getting slammed with a lot of BSOD within 15 seconds of wakeup from sleep. Errors include:
KMODE EXCEPTION NOT HANDLED -- always reports tcpip.sys is the culprit
KERNEL SECURITY CHECK FAILURE
DRVR IRQL NOT LESS OR EQUAL
Actions taken so far have been very simple:
Updated the chipset drivers as AMD appears to have a windows 10 version-specific driver for v2004
Checked BIOS revisions at Aorus/Gigabyte and I'm seeing a host of newer revisions, but (a) none of the newer ones speak to v2004 and (b) I don't know which is considered the most recent 'stable' version. I've left things as is at F11 with the bios for now.
Given the tcpip.sys getting flagged, I verified the network adaptor drivers are current. I have not forced any new drivers -- I've just had Windows look for newer ones, but they came back as current)
But clearly I need to do more. Based on the error codes I'm seeing, am I just dealing with an older driver problem here, or are there multiple areas of inquiry I need to be doing? Is there a systematic way to attack this?Also, given that stability seems perfect other than in returning from sleep, is there something I can tweak in Windows or the BIOS in sleep/wake settings that might alleviate this? (Beyond defeating sleep altogether, I mean.)
Thanks for the help,A