My PC encountered a BSOD while gaming and after analizing the dump files, it points to the driver r1710map.sys, which should be the rewasd remapping driver. Here's the report of the BSOD.
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rewasd driver causing BSOD
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Hey there!
Please check for errors in Event Viewer by following the steps below:
1. Press the Windows button, type [Event Viewer], and press Enter.
2. Choose [Windows Logs] in the upper left corner, then choose [Application].
3. Check out the panel on the right side: there's a [Find] option. Click it, and type "reWASD" to search for related errors.
4. Once you find one or multiple events, please right-click and "Save selected events..." on every one of them, and send us the file(s).
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Lonesurvivalist How big are we talking? If you can't upload it to the forum, you can try using any cloud storage service with public access.
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Shion its approximately 6 mb in size. Ill compress it and upload it looks like less than a MB nowAttached Files
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Originally Posted by Support Agent View PostPlease also include the minidump file.
Nothing shows up in the event viewer during the BSOD.
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We checked this and found it is really old problem reproduced only if you use Driver Verifier and some addition verification options (NDIS specific).
The code where crash happens is executed when you use Xbox Wireless dongle, but we did not find any bugs there and it is used very actively, so in case of real bug it would cause crash almost for anyone.
We had only several such reports in many years, but only from people who used additional (beyond standard) verifier options to "stress" their system.
So we assumed it is more like "false alarm" caused by some combination of verifier options in Microsoft drivers.
Do you use Driver Verifier too?
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Originally Posted by DevX View PostWe checked this and found it is really old problem reproduced only if you use Driver Verifier and some addition verification options (NDIS specific).
The code where crash happens is executed when you use Xbox Wireless dongle, but we did not find and bugs there and it is used very actively, so in case of real bug it would cause crash
almost for anyone. We had only several such reports in many years, but only from people who used additional (beyond standard) verifier options to "stress" their system.
So we assumed it is more like "false alarm" caused by some combination of verifier options in Microsoft drivers.
Do you use Driver Verifier too?
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Even if you don't use it, there is a chance some verifier options could be enabled by other programs on your PC. To be sure, run verifier.exe from C:\Windows\System32 folder under administrator.
This is standard Microsoft tool for setting driver verification options. Now select 'Delete existing settings', press 'Finish' and reboot your system.
This will get rid of any settings. This tool is intended to be used by driver developers only and any verifier option will also slow down your system significantly! So make sure you have nothing enabled there unless instructed by support.
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Originally Posted by DevX View PostEven if you don't use it, there is a chance some verifier options could be enabled by other programs on your PC. To be sure, run verifier.exe from C:\Windows\System32 folder under administrator.
This is standard Microsoft tool for setting driver verification options. Now select 'Delete existing settings', press 'Finish' and reboot your system.
This will get rid of any settings. This tool is intended to be used by driver developers only and any verifier option will also slow down your system significantly! So make sure you have nothing enabled there unless instructed by support.
But I did it and reboot anyways to make sure.
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