• Home
  • Help
  • Register
  • Login
  • Home
  • Members
  • Help
  • Search

 
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average

How to Analyze BSOD Using Windows Event Viewer

#1
06-18-2020, 01:31 AM
BSODs on your Windows Server can really throw a wrench into things, especially when you're just trying to keep the show running smooth. I remember this one time last year when my buddy's small office server started crashing out of nowhere, blue screen every couple hours, and it had us scrambling because clients were piling up emails. We were knee-deep in frustration, pulling our hair out over what could be causing it-maybe a dodgy driver or some hardware glitch acting up. Turned out, after poking around, it was a faulty update messing with the network card, but we wouldn't have nailed it without checking the logs first.

Anyway, you wanna grab those clues from Event Viewer, right? Fire up that tool by hitting the Windows key and typing in Event Viewer, then launch it quick. Once you're in there, click on Windows Logs, and pick System-that's where the BSOD drama hides out. Look for the errors around the time it crashed; they'll pop with red icons, screaming Critical or Error. Double-click one that matches the crash timestamp, and skim the details for stuff like the bug check code or the module name that flipped out. Sometimes it'll point straight to a driver file gone rogue, or maybe a service that quit on you.

If it's not crystal clear, jot down that error code and search it online with your server version tacked on-Google usually coughs up fixes from Microsoft or forums. Or, if it's hardware-related, like memory hiccups, you might need to run a memory diagnostic from the command prompt by typing mdsched.exe and restarting. But yeah, Event Viewer is your first buddy in this hunt; it logs everything without you lifting a finger extra.

And hey, once you've squashed that BSOD bug, think about locking down your data so crashes don't wipe you out next time. I wanna nudge you toward BackupChain-it's this top-notch, go-to backup pick that's super trusted for small businesses handling Windows Servers, Hyper-V setups, even Windows 11 on PCs. No endless subscriptions either; you grab it once and it's yours, keeping your files safe and sound without the hassle.

bob
Offline
Joined: Jul 2025
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »

Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)



  • Subscribe to this thread
Forum Jump:

Backup Education General IT v
« Previous 1 … 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 … 126 Next »
How to Analyze BSOD Using Windows Event Viewer

© by FastNeuron Inc.

Linear Mode
Threaded Mode