Hi sangwooksohn,
If you have overclocked your machine, try running it at its normal speed.
Also, are all your memory modules identical? Try booting your machine with
only one stick of memory in the first slot to see if that makes any
difference. Repeat with the other sticks and slots. Try different sticks,
slots and combinations.
"sangwooksohn" wrote:
> I have question regarding Kernel-WHEA (EventID 12) error log which seems to
> appear everytime Windows boots up.
>
> I am currently running Windows Vista Ultimate x64 on AMD Opteron 280 box
> with 4GB RAM. And I see following error log in Event Viewer;
>
> Event12, Kernel-WHEA
> Machine Check Event reported is a fatal Bus or Interconnect timeout error.
> Memory Hierarchy Level: 3
> Participation: 0
> Request Type: 3
> Memory/IO: 0
> Address: 30422400
>
>
> Same error log (different numbers in the address section, though) appears
> everytime Windows boots up, but it does not seem to reappear while Windows is
> on. In other words, this specific error gets logged only during the bootup
> process.
>
> Anyway, I did some research and tried to find out what it meant and how to
> fix it, but only things I found were WHEA meaning 'Windows Hardware Error
> Architecture' and Event12, Kernel-WHEA meaning 'Bus timeout machine check
> exception'.
>
> So I ran AMD's MCAT (Machine Check Analysis Tool) to dig little more
> information, and here what MCAT says:
>
> Event Source 0
> Processor Number : 0
> Bank Number : 0
> Time Stamp (0x): 01C83B55 755106C4
> Error Status (0x): D4384000 00000833
> Error Address (0x): 00000000 01D03580
> Error Misc. (0x): 00000000 00000000
> Single bit errors:
> Correctable ECC error
> Error address valid in MCi_ADDR
> Error reporting enabled
> Second error
> Error valid
> Bus Error Code:
> Participation processor: Local node originated the request (SRC)
> Time-out: Request did not time out
> Memory transaction type: Data read (DRD)
> I/O: DRAM memory access (MEM)
> Cache level: Generic (LG)
> Data Cache Error MC0:
> System line fill error into data cache
> Syndrome: 0x70
>
>
> I ran my system manufacturer provided diagnostic tool to see if I get any
> CPU/RAM related error, but all test had passed without any error. I do not
> have any problem in 'Device Manager' and even clean installation of Windows
> Vista didn't resolve the issue.
>
> This error log is driving me nuts for quite some time and since the my
> computer manufacturer does not provide any support other than the one running
> Windows XP, I am not comfortable to ask them to fix my issue unless I know
> specifically which part of my hardware (such as CPU or RAM) has gone wrong.
>
> So pelase, I desperately need any input to either resolve this annoying
> error, or at least a hint what part of my hardware is gone wrong.
>
> Thanks in advance
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