the bugchechek indicated that the nvidia driver was the cause:
Image path: \SystemRoot\system32\DRIVERS\nvlddmkm.sys
Timestamp: Fri Mar 18 19:26:05 2016
looks like the driver was trying to unload but did not free up its used memory first.
you might want to update or roll back to a different version.
your system was up for 40 seconds, so if you were updating the driver at the time then that would explain why the driver was being unloaded.
you might turn off verifier.exe and do the upgrade or downgrade, then enable it again after the software is changed. Just to see if you get another detected memory corruption. verifier will cause a bugcheck on the first corruption it finds.
the plug and play system shows 6 different devices with failed installs.
Dumping IopRootDeviceNode (= 0xfffffa801a849d90)
DevNode 0xfffffa8024341a50 for PDO 0xfffffa80265ff360
InstancePath is "CVUSBDRV\WBF_PROVIDER_TOUCH\7&170da90a&0&513"
ServiceName is "WUDFRd"
State = DeviceNodeInitialized (0x302)
Previous State = DeviceNodeUninitialized (0x301)
Problem = CM_PROB_FAILED_DRIVER_ENTRY
DevNode 0xfffffa8025e38190 for PDO 0xfffffa802431aa00
InstancePath is "USB\VID_0A5C&PID_5805&MI_01\6&34628215&0&0001"
ServiceName is "WUDFRd"
State = DeviceNodeInitialized (0x302)
Previous State = DeviceNodeUninitialized (0x301)
Problem = CM_PROB_FAILED_DRIVER_ENTRY
DevNode 0xfffffa802431dd90 for PDO 0xfffffa802431ba00
InstancePath is "USB\VID_0A5C&PID_5805&MI_02\6&34628215&0&0002"
ServiceName is "WUDFRd"
State = DeviceNodeInitialized (0x302)
Previous State = DeviceNodeUninitialized (0x301)
Problem = CM_PROB_FAILED_DRIVER_ENTRY
DevNode 0xfffffa802433fb40 for PDO 0xfffffa802432c880
InstancePath is "BCMNFCUSB\NFC_PROVIDER\7&18dd4635&0&257"
ServiceName is "WUDFRd"
State = DeviceNodeInitialized (0x302)
Previous State = DeviceNodeUninitialized (0x301)
Problem = CM_PROB_FAILED_DRIVER_ENTRY
DevNode 0xfffffa801b186390 for PDO 0xfffffa801b181350
InstancePath is "ACPI\INT3400\2&daba3ff&3"
ServiceName is "esif_lf"
State = DeviceNodeInitialized (0x302)
Previous State = DeviceNodeUninitialized (0x301)
Problem = CM_PROB_FAILED_DRIVER_ENTRY
Farri51 :
johnbl :
something is corruption kernel driver data, you will have to turn on verifier.exe flags to get windows to bugcheck when the corruption occurs and have a kernel memory dump.
start cmd.exe as an admin, then run
verifier.exe /standard /all
and reboot your machine, if verifier detects memory corruption it will cause a bugcheck and name the driver that overwrote memory.
note: be sure you know how to get into safe mode (f8 or shift+f8)
and know how to turn off verifier when you are done testing ie: run
verifier.exe /reset.
your system has a lot of 3rd party drivers installed, any one could be doing the corruption. Each bugcheck just shows the victim of the corruption rather than the cause.
to debug you need verifier on and a kernel memory dump.
- look in window device manager, the system reported that you have two device not installed correctly.
on looks like a cisco product the other was reported as your VGA
be sure to install drivers or remove the product./device from your system.
-I will look at the memory dump but try and get one that has verifier enabled.
your system was up for a long time, you might run cmd.exe as an admin and run
powercfg.exe /energy
to get a report and a check of your sleep functions.
you might also, try to see if this problem can be reproduced fasted by telling the system to sleep, then wake it, put it to sleep and wake it. do a bunch of cycles and see if it crashes.
the process that was running at the time of the crash was pcdrrealtime.p5x (pc doctor, I think dells version)
So I did everything as you suggested, which resulted in an error contained in the following Memory.dmp file.
http://www.fileconvoy.com/dfl.php?id=ga06345cae48b405c9998241136ce5f3e453d19f9f