AlucardSX
Contributor
- Sep 1, 2023
- 28
The problem seems to be connected to interrupts caused by ndis.sys, with DPC routine execution times allready starting out at a point where LatencyMon is telling me I might be having trouble handling real-time audio and other tasks, but nothing really noticeable during my daily usage (e.g. listening to podcasts, surfing the web, Office, gaming). However, the longer the system is running the worse the problem gets, starting with audio cracks and ending with the system becoming so unresponsive that it can take half a minute to register a mouse click. It doesn't seem to matter which download program I use, be it Chrome, Steam, Epic Launcher, battle.net launcher, GOG, etc. Maybe Xbox App/Windows Store could be considered be a bit better and qbittorrent a bit worse than the rest. It doesn't seem to matter which drive the download program is installed to, nor which drive it is downloading to.
I've had this problem for a long time, going to many different hardware iterations, from CPU, to motherboard, to RAM, to migrating my system partition to a SSD. I've tried to fix it on and off with little success, not least because, as you might imagine, trying to test fixes for a problem that doesn't immediately present itself after boot is kind of a nightmare.
Some fixes I've tried so far, in no particular order:
Here's a screenshot after the same 7 hours, but while downloading:
Here's my Speccy snapshot: http://speccy.piriform.com/results/g0BvGXRqGKMqVibxauibmDA
Here's a link to Sysnative BSOD collection files (collected during a download, not sure if that matters): Google Drive: Sign-in
Here's a link to a trace.etl file (also collected during a download): Google Drive: Sign-in
Any ideas as to what the hell is going on would be very much appreciated.
I've had this problem for a long time, going to many different hardware iterations, from CPU, to motherboard, to RAM, to migrating my system partition to a SSD. I've tried to fix it on and off with little success, not least because, as you might imagine, trying to test fixes for a problem that doesn't immediately present itself after boot is kind of a nightmare.
Some fixes I've tried so far, in no particular order:
Unplugged all my HDDs and ran my system with my SSDs only.
Flashed the latest BIOS on my Asrock Z590 Extreme motherboard, then resetting it to default (which boiled down to resetting my DRAM settings from Gear 2 to auto)
Updated the drivers for both ethernet ports on my motherboard (Intel® Ethernet Connection (14) I219v and Realtek PCIe 2.5 GbE Familiy Controller) then tested using either one while
disabling both the other one as well as all other Network adapters listed in device manager.
Disabled the WAN Module (Wifi+Bluetooth) in UEFI
Tried to switch from selective startup to normal startup in msconfig, which only caused Windows to throw a 0xc00000e error on boot, which I could only resolve using some half understood command line voodoo. If you hadn't guessed by now, I'm not exactly Kevin Mitnick >_>
Ran sfc /scannow in an elevated command prompt
Ran DISM.exe /Online /Cleanup-Image /RestoreHealth in elevated PowerShell
Ran /set useplatformclock false in an elevated command prompt
Switched the Interrupt Moderation Rate of my ethernet adapters from adaptive to extreme
Tested my Ram using MemTest86
Here's a screenshot of LatencyMon after around 7 hours of system runtime, while not actively downloading:Here's a screenshot after the same 7 hours, but while downloading:
Here's my Speccy snapshot: http://speccy.piriform.com/results/g0BvGXRqGKMqVibxauibmDA
Here's a link to Sysnative BSOD collection files (collected during a download, not sure if that matters): Google Drive: Sign-in
Here's a link to a trace.etl file (also collected during a download): Google Drive: Sign-in
Any ideas as to what the hell is going on would be very much appreciated.
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