***UNHANDLED EXCEPTION****
Reason: Access Violation (0xc0000005) at address 0x806FEF43 read attempt to address 0x806FEF43
1: 10/03/05 16:23:44
It´s the first time I get such result.
Computer: Pentium 4 HT 3,2 GHz
1 MB DDR-3200
ATI Radeon 9200 SE
WinXP Home (SP2)
Einstein 0.18
The second WU in this run results : valid
Chris
Chris,
What other messages are in the BOINC log at the time the error occurred? If they aren't in BoincMgr anymore, you can use notepad to look thru the log file - its stdoutdae.txt and stderrdae.txt in the BOINC folder.
Would you look to see what module is at 0x806FEF43? Process Explorer from the System Internals web site will show the modules loaded for each process, with XP you can download and run it from the .zip file.
To get the information start Process Explorer. In the top pane, click on the Einstein application. Look at the bottom pane and make sure it shows DLL's - you'll see a "Name" column and the names will end with .dll and .nls. If it shows something else press crtl-d - hold the ctrl key down and press "d".
You'll probably have to change the display options to get the necessary columns to display, so right click one of the column headers and click "Select Columns". If you don't get that selection you could also click "view" and "select columns" using the menu bar at the top.
In the "select columns" dialog switch to the DLL tab and make sure these items are checked: Description, Version, Name, Company Name, Base Address and Mapped Size. Click "OK" and check the DLL's in the lower pane. (the field "Image Base Address" isn't needed, its not the same as "base address")
In the bottom pane, look for the module that starts before the address 0x00x806FEF43. Sorting by address makes it easier, click on the "Base Address" header and it'll sort by that column. Click again and it'll reverse the sort. Then just go thru the list until you see one module before that address and the next one after that address. The modele before the address is what you're looking for.
When you find it, reply here with the details it shows. Unfortunately Process Explorer doesn't let you "cut and paste" the detail line, you'll have to retype the info in the reply
If it doesn't show any module at that address, click "show graphics" in BoincMgr to get the graphics window, that'll make sure the modules related to graphics are loaded. Then look again for the module.
RE: Today I ge the same
)
Chris,
What other messages are in the BOINC log at the time the error occurred? If they aren't in BoincMgr anymore, you can use notepad to look thru the log file - its stdoutdae.txt and stderrdae.txt in the BOINC folder.
Would you look to see what module is at 0x806FEF43? Process Explorer from the System Internals web site will show the modules loaded for each process, with XP you can download and run it from the .zip file.
To get the information start Process Explorer. In the top pane, click on the Einstein application. Look at the bottom pane and make sure it shows DLL's - you'll see a "Name" column and the names will end with .dll and .nls. If it shows something else press crtl-d - hold the ctrl key down and press "d".
You'll probably have to change the display options to get the necessary columns to display, so right click one of the column headers and click "Select Columns". If you don't get that selection you could also click "view" and "select columns" using the menu bar at the top.
In the "select columns" dialog switch to the DLL tab and make sure these items are checked: Description, Version, Name, Company Name, Base Address and Mapped Size. Click "OK" and check the DLL's in the lower pane. (the field "Image Base Address" isn't needed, its not the same as "base address")
In the bottom pane, look for the module that starts before the address 0x00x806FEF43. Sorting by address makes it easier, click on the "Base Address" header and it'll sort by that column. Click again and it'll reverse the sort. Then just go thru the list until you see one module before that address and the next one after that address. The modele before the address is what you're looking for.
When you find it, reply here with the details it shows. Unfortunately Process Explorer doesn't let you "cut and paste" the detail line, you'll have to retype the info in the reply
If it doesn't show any module at that address, click "show graphics" in BoincMgr to get the graphics window, that'll make sure the modules related to graphics are loaded. Then look again for the module.
Thanks,
Walt
Dear Walt, Thanks a lot for
)
Dear Walt,
Thanks a lot for your answer. I`ve found the Problem, It was the driver of my graphic card.
Regards
Chris
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