Sure. I have some notes on how perfview actually works. Let me make a video with some memory diff and how to collect memory from processes using perfview.
Your videos have been helpful. I own a computer repair business and I recently replaced a defective MB on a custom desktop. I had no issues ran a few stress test never crashed. The customer picked it up and while gaming is getting random and different bluescreens. The only files I am able to identify in windbg is ntkrnlmp.exe,ntoskrnl.exe. and a separate one identified the audio driver. Most of them are page fault in nonpaged area, but also get system_thread_exception_not_handled,irql_not_less_or_equal and kmode_exception_not_handled. I have installed a clean Windows 10 image a few times and countless drivers. Initially I didn't think the replacement motherboard is the issue but it is looking like that. He does only have 8gb of ram and a non-ssd HD I don't these are the problem but I am going to add 8gb and put a sata ssd in and see what happens. I ran the Windows memory test and memtest86 and both passed, swapped power supplies as well.
I'm not sure what this video is supposed to be doing, you ran perfview, did a dif and then looked at some are of the application you knew was uising a large amount of memory. That's not analysis, you just went straight to the issue, which technically wasn't an issue at all. Perhaps rename the video to how to perform a diff using perfview.
Helpful. Thank You . Would be nice to explain Perfview in basic level . There is no much resources to learn easy way.
Sure. I have some notes on how perfview actually works. Let me make a video with some memory diff and how to collect memory from processes using perfview.
Thanks. this video halped me alot.
Thanks man.
Your videos have been helpful. I own a computer repair business and I recently replaced a defective MB on a custom desktop. I had no issues ran a few stress test never crashed. The customer picked it up and while gaming is getting random and different bluescreens. The only files I am able to identify in windbg is ntkrnlmp.exe,ntoskrnl.exe. and a separate one identified the audio driver. Most of them are page fault in nonpaged area, but also get system_thread_exception_not_handled,irql_not_less_or_equal and kmode_exception_not_handled. I have installed a clean Windows 10 image a few times and countless drivers. Initially I didn't think the replacement motherboard is the issue but it is looking like that. He does only have 8gb of ram and a non-ssd HD I don't these are the problem but I am going to add 8gb and put a sata ssd in and see what happens. I ran the Windows memory test and memtest86 and both passed, swapped power supplies as well.
I'm not sure what this video is supposed to be doing, you ran perfview, did a dif and then looked at some are of the application you knew was uising a large amount of memory. That's not analysis, you just went straight to the issue, which technically wasn't an issue at all. Perhaps rename the video to how to perform a diff using perfview.