G guinny New member Joined Jan 8, 2017 Posts 3 Jan 20, 2017 #1 Hello, I've been running into issues trying to enable and keep my SLI stable on my PC. After enabling SLI, whenever I restart I'll be facing a BSOD "DRIVER_OVERRAN_STACK_BUFFER" and the only way for me to get back into Windows 10 is to access the restore point. After trying pretty much everythings, here's the things that are OKAY and NOT OKAY. OKAY Running either one 1080 by itself (Benchmark, Gaming stable 24hours.) Running both 1080s, but without SLI bridge (Device Manger detects them correctly.) Changed to another 2 different branded 1080s in SLI (Benchmark, Gaming stabled 24hours.) Running 32gb DDR4-3200 rams (No problem) NOT OKAY Connecting SLI Bridge (PC would boot fine the 1st time, can run benchmark/games. But after rebooting the PC would run into the BSOD code above indefinitely.) Tried drivers 376.60 / 376.13 / 372.19 (Tried almost every recent driver I could, but PC still wont boot after enabling SLI, running into the BSOD code above indefinitely.) I have scoured through this forum, and it seems like for my issue I need to post the following files for y'all to peruse through. Nvidia System Information File Driver Verifier dmp. file (Have it on my PC, website won't let me upload as an attachment.) Tried fixing it myself for 3 weeks now, and have since passed to the guys at my local pc show for 1 week, we're all stuck and can't figure out whether its a hardware or software issue. Figured I should give you guys a try, thanks so much in advance. Attachments NVIDIA System Information 01-20-2017 18-14-06.txt 4.6 KB · Views: 2
Hello, I've been running into issues trying to enable and keep my SLI stable on my PC. After enabling SLI, whenever I restart I'll be facing a BSOD "DRIVER_OVERRAN_STACK_BUFFER" and the only way for me to get back into Windows 10 is to access the restore point. After trying pretty much everythings, here's the things that are OKAY and NOT OKAY. OKAY Running either one 1080 by itself (Benchmark, Gaming stable 24hours.) Running both 1080s, but without SLI bridge (Device Manger detects them correctly.) Changed to another 2 different branded 1080s in SLI (Benchmark, Gaming stabled 24hours.) Running 32gb DDR4-3200 rams (No problem) NOT OKAY Connecting SLI Bridge (PC would boot fine the 1st time, can run benchmark/games. But after rebooting the PC would run into the BSOD code above indefinitely.) Tried drivers 376.60 / 376.13 / 372.19 (Tried almost every recent driver I could, but PC still wont boot after enabling SLI, running into the BSOD code above indefinitely.) I have scoured through this forum, and it seems like for my issue I need to post the following files for y'all to peruse through. Nvidia System Information File Driver Verifier dmp. file (Have it on my PC, website won't let me upload as an attachment.) Tried fixing it myself for 3 weeks now, and have since passed to the guys at my local pc show for 1 week, we're all stuck and can't figure out whether its a hardware or software issue. Figured I should give you guys a try, thanks so much in advance.
G guinny New member Joined Jan 8, 2017 Posts 3 Jan 20, 2017 #2 Just went through all my .dmp files, and found out in every single one of them nvlddmkm.sys was the cause. If I'm not mistaken this is one of Nvidia's driver eh?
Just went through all my .dmp files, and found out in every single one of them nvlddmkm.sys was the cause. If I'm not mistaken this is one of Nvidia's driver eh?
M MichaelB Sysnative Staff, BSOD Kernel Dump Senior Analyst Staff member Joined Dec 3, 2014 Posts 247 Location Germany Jan 20, 2017 #3 Hi, spare info about your System, Win10, Build? Mainboard? may be an X99 Board-Typ. Overclocked? SLI-Ready Board? PSU has enough power to drive both? ~1KW your nVidia output shows >> Bus: PCI Express x8 Gen3 << i would have expected PCIe x16 Gen3 for both Cards here. but a Dump would be fine anyway, external linked may be ok too. Last edited: Jan 20, 2017
Hi, spare info about your System, Win10, Build? Mainboard? may be an X99 Board-Typ. Overclocked? SLI-Ready Board? PSU has enough power to drive both? ~1KW your nVidia output shows >> Bus: PCI Express x8 Gen3 << i would have expected PCIe x16 Gen3 for both Cards here. but a Dump would be fine anyway, external linked may be ok too.
xilolee Moderator Staff member Joined Dec 31, 2013 Posts 3,670 Location World, Europe, Italy Jan 20, 2017 #4 Hi Guinny. :welcome: Could you run the BSOD file collection app (click) and post the archived logs here? Please provide answers for (answer the best that you can): System Manufacturer? Laptop or Desktop? Exact model number (if laptop, check label on bottom) OS ? (Windows 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista) x86 (32bit) or x64 (64bit)? Service pack? What was original installed OS on system? Is the OS an OEM version (came pre-installed on system) or full retail version (YOU purchased it from retailer)? Age of system? (hardware) Age of OS installation? Have you re-installed the OS? CPU RAM (brand, model, which slots are you using?) Video Card MotherBoard - (if NOT a laptop) Power Supply - brand & wattage (if laptop, skip this one) What security software are you using? (Firewall, antivirus, antimalware, antispyware, and so forth) Are you using proxy, vpn, ipfilters or similar software? Are you using Disk Image tools? (like daemon tools, alcohol 52% or 120%, virtual CloneDrive, roxio software) Are you currently under/overclocking? Are there overclocking software installed on your system? Facultative step: Retrieve System Information, using speccy Download Speccy portable - actual version 1.29.714 (click), unzip/decompress it and put it on your desktop. When the program opens, it will retrieve some information regarding your system. Once it's done, select the File menu and choose Publish snapshot. Answer Yes to the confirmation message. On the next screen that comes up, choose the Copy to Clipboard button and paste this link in your next reply. (Or attach the log here, if you prefer to not publish it for some reason)
Hi Guinny. :welcome: Could you run the BSOD file collection app (click) and post the archived logs here? Please provide answers for (answer the best that you can): System Manufacturer? Laptop or Desktop? Exact model number (if laptop, check label on bottom) OS ? (Windows 10, 8.1, 8, 7, Vista) x86 (32bit) or x64 (64bit)? Service pack? What was original installed OS on system? Is the OS an OEM version (came pre-installed on system) or full retail version (YOU purchased it from retailer)? Age of system? (hardware) Age of OS installation? Have you re-installed the OS? CPU RAM (brand, model, which slots are you using?) Video Card MotherBoard - (if NOT a laptop) Power Supply - brand & wattage (if laptop, skip this one) What security software are you using? (Firewall, antivirus, antimalware, antispyware, and so forth) Are you using proxy, vpn, ipfilters or similar software? Are you using Disk Image tools? (like daemon tools, alcohol 52% or 120%, virtual CloneDrive, roxio software) Are you currently under/overclocking? Are there overclocking software installed on your system? Facultative step: Retrieve System Information, using speccy Download Speccy portable - actual version 1.29.714 (click), unzip/decompress it and put it on your desktop. When the program opens, it will retrieve some information regarding your system. Once it's done, select the File menu and choose Publish snapshot. Answer Yes to the confirmation message. On the next screen that comes up, choose the Copy to Clipboard button and paste this link in your next reply. (Or attach the log here, if you prefer to not publish it for some reason)