Ca y est: un petit BSOD de bon matin, sacré Windows
J'ai fait l'analyse avec WhoCrashed: ça a l'air de venir d'un pilote qui ne serait pas à jour. Apparemment ça vient pas d'un problème matériel ce qui est déjà un bon point. J'ai contacté le fabricant de mon disque dur SSD qui me conseille de faire une mise à jour du firmware: je m'en occupe aujourd'hui car j'ai déjà vu des rapports d'erreurs sur ma machine où le disque dur était impliqué.
Sinon je sais que le pilote de ma carte graphique n'est pas à jour lui non plus mais je ne peux pas faire autrement pour l'instant: je bosse avec une application qui ne supporte pas encore les drivers plus récents.
Voici le copié collé de WhoCrashed:
Crash Dump Analysis
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Crash dump directory: G:\Windows CrashDump Files
Crash dumps are enabled on your computer.
On Tue 29/05/2012 05:52:45 GMT your computer crashed
crash dump file: G:\Windows CrashDump Files\052912-11029-01.dmp
This was probably caused by the following module: ntoskrnl.exe (nt+0x7F1C0)
Bugcheck code: 0xA (0xEA0002, 0x2, 0x0, 0xFFFFF8000348B339)
Error: IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL
file path: C:\Windows\system32\ntoskrnl.exe
product: Microsoft® Windows® Operating System
company: Microsoft Corporation
description: NT Kernel & System
Bug check description: This indicates that Microsoft Windows or a kernel-mode driver accessed paged memory at DISPATCH_LEVEL or above.
This appears to be a typical software driver bug and is not likely to be caused by a hardware problem.
The crash took place in the Windows kernel. Possibly this problem is caused by another driver which cannot be identified at this time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conclusion
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 crash dumps have been found and analyzed.
Read the topic general suggestions for troubleshooting system crashes for more information.
Note that it's not always possible to state with certainty whether a reported driver is actually responsible for crashing your system or that the root cause is in another module. Nonetheless it's suggested you look for updates for the products that these drivers belong to and regularly visit Windows update or enable automatic updates for Windows. In case a piece of malfunctioning hardware is causing trouble, a search with Google on the bug check errors together with the model name and brand of your computer may help you investigate this further.