A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP. The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. We potentially may be able to get more information from that.
#Blue screen memory management 0x00001a archive
Once done, compress it in a ZIP archive and upload that archive to something like Dropbox, Mega, Google Drive, etc. Please copy this to a place outside of the Windows directory, such as your Desktop or Documents. There should be a MEMORY.dmp file in the following location: C:\WINDOWS\MEMORY.DMP Please run a test on your storage disk: Hard Drive (HDD) Diagnostics (Sea Tools for DOS) & SSD Test Parameters 3/4 contain the low/high parts of the PTE. Parameter 2 contains the address of the PTE. This indicates that the kernel has detected critical kernel code or data corruption.įrom the bugcheck 1A we have parameter one as 41792, which is the following:Ī corrupted PTE has been detected. The CRITICAL_STRUCTURE_CORRUPTION bug check has a value of 0x00000109. This indicates that a severe memory management error occurred. I have analysed your dumps and have come to the following conclusion:īugCheck 1A, The MEMORY_MANAGEMENT bug check has a value of 0x0000001A.
#Blue screen memory management 0x00001a drivers
There doesn't seem to be a specific program use pattern to the BSOD's either (today it died whilst setting up a Teams meeting - something I've done dozens of times previously without issue), but by the same token I can use Photoshop or Adobe Premiere for 8 hours straight without issue.Īll drivers (AFAIK) are up to date and running on latest Windows build.Īnd I've also attached the sysnative zip as requested. The BSOD's as said, appear to be at totally random intervals, sometimes going weeks without issue and other times a couple of times a day.
Ran tests on all RAM sticks (Memtest86), as well as stress tested the CPU and GPU with Prime 95 - all tests come back as showing no errors. First post, so hopefully not missing anything out in the description or required attachments.įor the past 12 months, I've been having totally random BSOD's all related to Memory Management Issues.