Nuker22110
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- Jan 29, 2014
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hello, i have an issue which causes a bsod. I have tried to fix the issue but am unable. However, the computer runs fine for awhile, before crashing, hence now i am looking to maximise uptime. My question is, how do i force the computer to restart after every BSOD?
i have enabled automatic restart in startup and recovery, and followed the instructions here
However, the computer will just stop at the bsod screen and not restart.
thank you for your help
i have enabled automatic restart in startup and recovery, and followed the instructions here
However, the computer will just stop at the bsod screen and not restart.
thank you for your help
Solution
Hmm... reading dmp files on virtual machines is beyond my capabilities I'm afraid and appears to be a specialized job. If anyone could point you in the right direction then these guy's could:
http://www.sysnative.com/forums/forum.php?s=b4c98195d62afdd4f60ad8b311afc002
Usually bsod's are caused by drivers. Update whatever it is your using whether it be Bios, firmware or driver make sure it's the latest version and usually you can't go far wrong.
This is also why even after making the correct changes to the settings your system isn't rebooting after a bsod because it's using a virtual machine. That is what is crashing not your actual machine.
http://www.sysnative.com/forums/forum.php?s=b4c98195d62afdd4f60ad8b311afc002
Usually bsod's are caused by drivers. Update whatever it is your using whether it be Bios, firmware or driver make sure it's the latest version and usually you can't go far wrong.
This is also why even after making the correct changes to the settings your system isn't rebooting after a bsod because it's using a virtual machine. That is what is crashing not your actual machine.
Nuker22110
New Member
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- Jan 29, 2014
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- Thread Author
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- #3
kemical
Essential Member
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- Aug 28, 2007
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Hmm... reading dmp files on virtual machines is beyond my capabilities I'm afraid and appears to be a specialized job. If anyone could point you in the right direction then these guy's could:
http://www.sysnative.com/forums/forum.php?s=b4c98195d62afdd4f60ad8b311afc002
Usually bsod's are caused by drivers. Update whatever it is your using whether it be Bios, firmware or driver make sure it's the latest version and usually you can't go far wrong.
This is also why even after making the correct changes to the settings your system isn't rebooting after a bsod because it's using a virtual machine. That is what is crashing not your actual machine.
http://www.sysnative.com/forums/forum.php?s=b4c98195d62afdd4f60ad8b311afc002
Usually bsod's are caused by drivers. Update whatever it is your using whether it be Bios, firmware or driver make sure it's the latest version and usually you can't go far wrong.
This is also why even after making the correct changes to the settings your system isn't rebooting after a bsod because it's using a virtual machine. That is what is crashing not your actual machine.
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