Share via

STOP 0x1000007e blue screen

Anonymous
2011-10-19T17:25:30+00:00

Original Title:I keep getting error code 1000007e blue screen on my Windows &  (just been week and it pops up all the time after some time of normal use)? What do I do?

Problem signature:

  Problem Event Name:    BlueScreen

  OS Version:    6.1.7601.2.1.0.256.48

  Locale ID:    2057

Additional information about the problem:

  BCCode:    1000007e

  BCP1:    C0000005

  BCP2:    88E64F61

  BCP3:    8C9A9774

  BCP4:    8C9A92A0

  OS Version:    6_1_7601

  Service Pack:    1_0

  Product:    256_1

I am too confused.

I have both XP and 7 on each of my partitions on a single hard drive (I partitioned my hard drive, put xp on one partition, then through XP i put windows 7 on other partition,

I dont mind having to reinstall everything again and get rid of XP once and for all and put windows7 on its own, but is there a solution where i can deal with this issue instead of through the hassle of reinstalling?

MOre detail: First time it happened was when i was trying to install PC TOols antivirus, (i had to try pc tools because Avira used to loop in some part of the installation and could never complete. BUt i got rid of pctools, and put in avast, but even that, whenever avast updates, avast then crashes

AND when i am browsing, it usually goes into that blue screen when I try to watch videos , i cant remember the time i was able to watch a video in peace over the last week,  (Oh also worth mentioning is that it also refused to install adobe flash through the adobe website so i had to get a installer for the adobe flash and installed it that way instead.

Windows for home | Previous Windows versions | Windows update

Locked Question. This question was migrated from the Microsoft Support Community. You can vote on whether it's helpful, but you can't add comments or replies or follow the question.

0 comments No comments

Answer accepted by question author

Anonymous
2011-10-20T05:43:59+00:00

Hi,

Check these KB articles :

"Stop 0x0000007E" or "Stop 0x00000050" Stop error message in Windows 7 or Windows Server

2008 R2

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/979538

"Stop 0x0000007E SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED" error when the GPU is under

heavy load conditions in Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/983615


See this thread for information on using BlueScreenView, MyEventViewer, and other methods to

troubleshoot BlueScreens - top 3 replies (+1 other).

http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_7-system/sometimes-i-get-a-blue-screen-when-using-ie-8/c675b7b8-795f-474d-a1c4-6b77b3fcd990We can analyze the minidumps if you make them available from the SkyDrive or other file

sharing sites.

Zip or upload the contents of C:\Windows\minidump

Use SkyDrive to upload collected files.

http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/w7itproui/thread/4fc10639-02db-4665-993a-08d865088d65


References to Vista also apply to Windows 7.BCCode: 7E      0x0000007E  which is also 0x1000007EThis error is usually a driver issue and display adapter (video) driver is the most suspect though it

could be others. Antivirus/antispyware/security programs, hardware (heat) and major software issues

can also cause the error. When you get to the driver section of the troubleshooter use my generic

methods in the next message and then return to the troubleshooter if needed.

Have you added hardware recently or updated drivers? Be sure to look in Control Panel - Windows

Updates to see if any drivers were updated there. Other lessor possibilities include antivirus/anti-

spyware/security programs.

When you get to the driver and memory sections of the troubleshooter refer to the next message to

update drivers and test memory and then refer back to the troubleshooter if needed.

BCCode: 7E      0x0000007E  which is also 0x1000007E

Cause

The SYSTEM_THREAD_EXCEPTION_NOT_HANDLED bug check is a very common bug check. To

interpret it, you must identify which exception was generated.

Common exception codes include the following:

  • 0x80000002: STATUS_DATATYPE_MISALIGNMENT indicates an unaligned data reference was encountered.
  • 0x80000003: STATUS_BREAKPOINT indicates a breakpoint or ASSERT was encountered when no kernel debugger was attached to the system.
  • 0xC0000005: STATUS_ACCESS_VIOLATION indicates a memory access violation occurred.

For a complete list of exception codes, see the Ntstatus.h file that is located in theinc directory of

the Microsoft Windows Driver Kit (WDK).

Resolving the Problem

If you are not equipped to debug this problem, you should use some basic troubleshooting techniques.

  • Make sure you have enough disk space.
  • If a driver is identified in the bug check message, disable the driver or check with the
  • manufacturer for driver updates.
  • Try changing video adapters.
  • Check with your hardware vendor for any BIOS updates.
  • Disable BIOS memory options such as caching or shadowing.

If you plan to debug this problem, you might find it difficult to obtain a stack trace. Parameter 2

(the exception address) should identify the driver or function that caused this problem.

If exception code 0x80000003 occurs, a hard-coded breakpoint or assertion was hit, but the system

was started with the /NODEBUG switch. This problem should rarely occur. If it occurs repeatedly,

make sure that a kernel debugger is connected and the system is started with the /DEBUG switch.

If exception code 0x80000002 occurs, the trap frame supplies additional information.

If you do not know the specific cause of the exception, consider the following issues:

  • Hardware incompatibility*.* Make sure that any new hardware that is installed is listed in the
  • Microsoft Windows Marketplace Tested Products List.
  • Faulty device driver or system service*.* A faulty device driver or system service might be
  • responsible for this error. Hardware issues, such as BIOS incompatibilities, memory conflicts,
  • and IRQ conflicts can also generate this error.

If a driver is listed by name within the bug check message, disable or remove that driver. Disable

or remove any drivers or services that were recently added. If the error occurs during the startup

sequence and the system partition is formatted with NTFS file system, you might be able to use Safe

Mode to rename or delete the faulty driver. If the driver is used as part of the system startup process

in Safe Mode, you must start the computer by using the Recovery Console to access the file.

If the problem is associated with Win32k.sys, the source of the error might be a third-party remote

control program. If such software is installed, you can remove the service by starting the computer

by using the Recovery Console and then deleting the offending system service file.

Check the System Log in Event Viewer for additional error messages that might help identify the

device or driver that is causing bug check 0x7E.

You can also disable memory caching of the BIOS might to try to resolve the error. You should also

run hardware diagnostics, especially the memory scanner, that the system manufacturer supplies.

For more information about these procedures, see the owner's manual for your computer.

The error that generates this message can occur after the first restart during Windows Setup, or

after Setup is finished. A possible cause of the error is lack of disk space for installation and system

BIOS incompatibilities. For problems during Windows installation that are associated with lack of disk

space, reduce the number of files on the target hard disk drive. Check for and delete any temporary

files that you do not have to have, Internet cache files, application backup files, and*.chk*files that

contain saved file fragments from disk scans. You can also use another hard disk drive with more

free space for the installation. You can resolve BIOS problems by upgrading the system BIOS version.

BCCode: 7E    0x00000007E  which is also 0x1000007E <-- read this link

http://www.faultwire.com/solutions-fatal\_error/SYSTEM-THREAD-EXCEPTION-NOT-HANDLED-0x0000007E-\*1141.html?order=votes

===============================================================

Look in the Event Viewer to see if anything is reported about those.

http://www.computerperformance.co.uk/vista/vista\_event\_viewer.htm

MyEventViewer - Free - a simple alternative to the standard event viewer of Windows.TIP - Options - Advanced Filter allows you to see a time frame instead of the whole file.

http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/my\_event\_viewer.html

Here are some methods to possibly fix the blue screen issue. If you could give the Blue Screen info

that would help. Such as the BCC and the other 4 entries on the lower left. And any other error

information such as STOP codes and info such as IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL or PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA and similar messages.

As examples :

BCCode: 116

BCP1: 87BC9510

BCP2: 8C013D80

BCP3: 00000000

BCP4: 00000002

or in this format :

Stop: 0x00000000 (oxoooooooo oxoooooooo oxooooooooo oxoooooooo)

tcpip.sys - Address 0x00000000 base at 0x000000000 DateStamp 0x000000000

This is an excellent tool for posting Blue Screen Error InformationBlueScreenView scans all your minidump files created during 'blue screen of death'crashes, and displays the information about all crashes in one table - Freehttp://www.nirsoft.net/utils/blue\_screen\_view.html

Many BlueScreens are caused by old or corrupted drivers, especially video drivers however

there are other causes.

You can do these in Safe Mode if needed or from Command Prompt from Vista DVD or

Recovery Options if your system has that installed by the maker.

How to Boot to the System Recovery Options in Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/668-system-recovery-options.html

You can try a System Restore back to a point before the problem started if there is one.

How to Do a System Restore in Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/700-system-restore.html


Start - type this in Search Box ->  COMMAND   find at top and RIGHT CLICK  -  RUN AS ADMIN

Enter this at the prompt - sfc /scannow

How to Repair Windows 7 System Files with System File Checker

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/1538-sfc-scannow-command-system-file-checker.html

How to analyze the log file entries that the Microsoft Windows Resource Checker (SFC.exe) program

generates in Windows Vista cbs.log (and Windows 7)

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928228

The log might give you the answer if there was a corrupted driver. (Does not tell all the possible

driver issues).

Also run CheckDisk so we can rule out corruption as much as possible.

How to Run Check Disk at Startup in Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/433-disk-check.html


Often updating drivers will help, usually Video, Sound, Network Card  (NIC), WiFi, 3rd party

keyboard and mouse, as well as other major device drivers.

Manually look at manufacturer's sites for drivers - and Device Maker's sites.

http://pcsupport.about.com/od/driverssupport/ht/driverdlmfgr.htm

Installing and updating drivers in Windows 7 (updating drivers manually using the methods above

is preferred to ensure the latest drivers from System maker and Device makers are found)

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/43216-installing-updating-drivers-7-a.html

Stop Windows 7 from Automatically Installing Device Drivers

http://helpdeskgeek.com/windows-7/stop-windows-7-from-automatically-installing-device-drivers/

How To Disable Automatic Driver Installation In Windows 7 / Vista

http://www.addictivetips.com/windows-tips/how-to-disable-automatic-driver-installation-in-windows-vista/

Disable Windows Update Device Driver Search Prompt In Windows 7 / Vista (for Professional,

Ultimate, and Enterprise)

http://www.addictivetips.com/windows-tips/disable-windows-update-device-driver-search-prompt/


How to fix BlueScreen (STOP) errors that cause Windows Vista to shut down or restart

unexpectedly

http://support.microsoft.com/kb/958233

Troubleshooting Vista Blue Screen, STOP Errors (and Windows 7)

http://www.chicagotech.net/vista/vistabluescreen.htm

Understanding and Decoding BSOD (blue screen of death) Messages

http://www.taranfx.com/blog/?p=692

Windows - Troubleshooting Blue Screen Errors

http://kb.wisc.edu/page.php?id=7033


In some cases this might be required.

StartUp Repair from Recovery Options or Windows 7 disk

How to Run a Startup Repair in Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/681-startup-repair.html

How to Boot to the System Recovery Options in Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/668-system-recovery-options.html

How to Create a Windows 7 System Repair Disc

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/2083-system-repair-disc-create.html

How to Do a Repair Install to Fix Windows 7

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/3413-repair-install.html

Hope this helps.


Rob Brown - Microsoft MVP <- profile - Windows Expert - Consumer : Bicycle - Mark Twain said it right.

Was this answer helpful?

2 people found this answer helpful.
0 comments No comments

3 additional answers

Sort by: Most helpful
  1. Anonymous
    2014-10-19T06:55:24+00:00

    I have this exact problem, but in Windows 8, and now in Windows 8.1 (I updated to see if that solved the problem)

    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/983615/en-us

    Unfortunately, this hotfix only applies on Windows 7 systems.

    Ever since I installed a couple of months worth of Windows updates 2 weeks ago, I have been getting BSOD's, but only when I run heavy graphics programs like Vegas Pro, Capture NX2, Premiere Pro, etc.

    The initials bugcheck codes were 0x3b's and one 0x50.  In the last 24 hours I've gotten two 0x1000007e's, one 0x3b and one 0x24.

    I have rolled by my Nvidia drivers, run memory checker, scanned the hard drives, swapped out the RAM, tried individual GeForce cards (I'm running two) in both slots, run the EVGA GPU burner and CPU burner tests, verified I am running the latest system BIOS, in short, I've done everything except swap out the motherboard.

    If this was some problem with the Windows 8 updates, I would think moving to 8.1 would solve it. But it has made no difference.

    This is a high end video editing and graphics workstation that works perfectly unless I'm doing heavy graphics or video editing work.  Which, of course, is just PERFECT!

    Help!

    Was this answer helpful?

    0 comments No comments
  2. Anonymous
    2011-10-20T05:44:18+00:00

    Hi,

    References to Vista also apply to Windows 7.

    This is my generic how to for proper driver updates : (Check for BIOS and driver updates.)

    This utility makes it easy to see which versions are loaded :

    DriverView - Free - utility displays the list of all device drivers currently loaded on your system.

    For each driver in the list, additional useful information is displayed: load address of the driver,

    description, version, product name, company that created the driver, and more.

    http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/driverview.html

    For Drivers check System Maker as fallbacks and Device Maker's which are the most current.

    Control Panel - Device Manager - Display Adapter - write down the make and complete model

    of your video adapter - double click - Driver's tab - write down the version info. Now click UPdate

    Driver (this may not do anything as MS is far behind certifying drivers) - then Right Click -

    Uninstall - REBOOT this will refresh the driver stack.

    Repeat that for Network - Network Card (NIC), Wifi, Sound, Mouse and Keyboard if 3rd party

    with their own software and drivers and any other major device drivers you have.

    Now go to System Maker's site (Dell, HP, Toshiba as examples) (as rollback) and then Device

    Maker's site (Realtek, Intel, Nvidia, ATI as examples) and get their latest versions. (Look for

    BIOS, Chipset and software updates at System Maker's site while there.)

    Download - SAVE - go to where you put them - Right Click - RUN AD ADMIN - REBOOT after

    each installation.

    Always check in Device Manager - Drivers tab to be sure the version you are installing actually

    shows up. This is because some drivers rollback before the latest is installed (sound drivers

    particularly do this) so install a driver - reboot - check to be sure it is installed and repeat as

    needed.

    Repeat at Device Makers - BTW at Device Makers DO NOT RUN THEIR SCANNER - check

    manually by model.

    Manually look at manufacturer's sites for drivers - and Device Maker's sites.

    http://pcsupport.about.com/od/driverssupport/ht/driverdlmfgr.htm

    Installing and updating drivers in Windows 7 (updating drivers manually using the methods above

    is preferred to ensure the latest drivers from System maker and Device makers are found)

    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/43216-installing-updating-drivers-7-a.html

    If you update drivers manually then it is a good idea to disable Driver Installations in Windows

    Updates, this leaves Windows Updates ON however it will not install drivers which will usually be

    older and cause issues. If Updates suggests a new driver then HIDE it (Right Click on it) and then

    go look for new ones manually if you wish.

    Stop Windows 7 from Automatically Installing Device Drivers

    http://helpdeskgeek.com/windows-7/stop-windows-7-from-automatically-installing-device-drivers/

    How To Disable Automatic Driver Installation In Windows 7 / Vista

    http://www.addictivetips.com/windows-tips/how-to-disable-automatic-driver-installation-in-windows-vista/

    Disable Windows Update Device Driver Search Prompt In Windows 7 / Vista (for Professional,

    Ultimate, and Enterprise)

    http://www.addictivetips.com/windows-tips/disable-windows-update-device-driver-search-prompt/

    ==========================================

    Memory tests do not catch all errors such as mismatched memory (possible even for sticks

    that appear to be identical) and when faster memory is placed in system behind slower memory.

    So it is best to also swap sticks in and out to check for those even if all memory tests fail to show

    a problem.

    To test RAM check here - let it run 4+ hours or so.  <-- best methodwww.memtest.org

    For the Vista/Windows 7 Memory Diagnostic Tool

    Start - type in Search box ->  Memory - find Memory Diagnostics tool at top of list - Right Click -

    RUN AS ADMIN follow the instructions

    Windows Vista: How to Scan / Test your RAM or Memory with Windows Vista Memory Diagnostic

    Tool

    http://www.shivaranjan.com/2007/11/01/windows-vista-how-to-scan-test-your-ram-or-memory-with-windows-vista-memory-diagnostic-tool/

    How to Run the Memory Diagnostics Tool in Windows 7

    http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/715-memory-diagnostics-tool.html

    Test Your Computer’s Memory Using Windows Vista Memory Diagnostic Tool

    http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/test-your-computers-memory-using-windows-vista-memory-diagnostic-tool/

    Hope this helps.


    Rob Brown - Microsoft MVP <- profile - Windows Expert - Consumer : Bicycle - Mark Twain said it right.

    Was this answer helpful?

    0 comments No comments
  3. Anonymous
    2011-10-20T05:19:32+00:00

    Hi,

    ·         Do you face this issue only with Windows 7?

    A crash can be caused by due to a lot of reasons. A few of them being the following:

     1. An outdated or misbehaving device driver.

    1. Computer virus.
    2. A corrupted program.
    3. A problem with your computer's memory.
    4. Hard disk or motherboard is corrupted

    Method 1:

    Firstly, make sure you have all the latest Windows 7 Compatible drivers installed on your computer. Visit the manufacturer’s website and update the device drivers.

    Method 2:

     Try to boot into safe mode and check if the issue persists:

     1. Remove all floppy disks, CDs, and DVDs from your computer, and then restart your computer.

     Click the Start button; click the arrow next to the Shut Down button , and then click Restart.

     2. Do one of the following:

    a)      If your computer has a single operating system installed, press and hold the F8 key as your computer restarts. You need to press F8 before the Windows logo appears. If the Windows logo appears, you'll need to try again by waiting until the Windows logon prompt appears, and then shutting down and restarting your computer.

    b)      If your computer has more than one operating system, use the arrow keys to highlight the operating system you want to start in safe mode, and then press F8.

    1. On the Advanced Boot Options screen, use the arrow keys to highlight the safe mode option you want, and then press Enter. For more information about options, see Advanced startup options (including safe mode).
    2. Log on to your computer with a user account that has administrator rights.

    When your computer is in safe mode, you'll see the words Safe Mode in the corners of your monitor. To exit safe mode, restart your computer and let Windows start normally.

     Let us know if the issue repeats in safe mode.

    Method 3:

    Run memory diagnostics on RAM and if the tool detects errors, you should contact your computer manufacturer for information about fixing them, since memory errors usually indicate a problem with the memory chips in your computer or other hardware problem.

     Also see:

    http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ff557196(v=vs.85).aspx

    Was this answer helpful?

    0 comments No comments