Vivaldi Rebooted my PC
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@pesala said in Vivaldi Rebooted my PC:
@catweazle My PC case is reasonably clean. The most recent episode happened not long after starting up, so was unlikely to have been caused by over-heating. Since this only happens when using Vivaldi, perhaps the devs should look at what is overloading the CPU so much?
Well I do not notice at all an excessive use of the CPU on my PC, which with Vivaldi does not exceed 25% with a reasonable amount of open tabs.
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Temperature is excluded here .
Encoding video and gaming wont reboot my pc something is weird with vivaldi at the moment -
As @Morg42 has suggested, have any of those experiencing the problem ( @Pesala, @emaentie, @Scorpiopt115) looked at their Windows event viewer logs for the time-frame surrounding these reboots regarding any error or warning listings... or even peculiar ordinary entries just prior to the reboot?
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Of course to be able to address such a bug, one must first be able to reproduce it. I don't know for sure about any of the other testers or developers, but I do know that I have Vivaldi Stable and Vivaldi Snapshot installed on nine (windows 7 or 10) machines and two operating systems (windows and linux Mint). Five of these machines are 32-bit systems, and four are 64-bit. The machines range in age from about 14 years old to about 3 years old, have processors as old as P4 and as new as A10, RAM ranging from 2GB to 16GB, and various graphics card from onboard Intel 965 Express mobile or NVidia GeForce 5200 to ASUS EAH5450. I can't make Vivaldi reboot any of these machines, no matter what I do. I can get some pretty high CPU usage on a couple of them, but that's all. Certainly this is not every possible kind of machine or system, but it's a fairly broad sampling.
To my mind, this points to something unique going on, on the user's system. Again, without the ability to reproduce a bug, there is no way to fix it.
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I've had my computer reboot on me twice recently while running a browser - but only one of those was Vivaldi. (The other was Opera.) So either it is a Chromium issue (common to all Chromium-based browsers, including Chrome itself) or it was just coincidence. No. I don't know how to reproduce it either.
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searched on the event log nothing there besides the unexpected reboot
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@scorpiopt115 said in Vivaldi Rebooted my PC:
searched on the event log nothing there besides the unexpected reboot
In the Windows > System log, at the time of shutdown/reboot, there should be a series of event messages including something like "The kernel power manager has initiated a shutdown transition. Shutdown Reason: Kernel API". That message should be preceeded by perhaps 8 or more related events that might give some clue as to what triggered the reboot. The event messages immediately following the kernel power management shutdown/reboot notice may also give some clue(s) regarding things being restarted and if any kind of boot repair was initiated.
Also, be sure to check the Application log as well for anything around/just-preceeding the reboot time.
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Also present unexpected PC reboot, my config of the A10-7700K, 8 GB, no GPU. I was not able to understand what kind of trouble. Center Windows error just indicates a bad shutdown. A bug appeared in the beginning of autumn, I thought that a problem in gland or a power outage, but then came across a topic in the forum. And now not so sure of their guesses. But to believe that the browser can force the computer to restart also do not want to believe.
And it happened as the insider builds of Windows and stable 1709, to remember something like that on 1703 can't. -
@broztyto
And it happened as the insider builds of Windows and stable 1709, to remember something like that on 1703 can't. -
What's an A10 with no GPU - the GPU is part of the processor. My A10-6700P lists as 4 processor cores and 6 GPU cores.
My machine rebooted while Opera was running again a few hours ago, for some reason when it came up it had no wi-fi. Restart didn't fix it, after a proper shutdown and reboot it is now working again. (As I said before, either it is a Chromium issue or else unrelated - and I doubt it is unrelated at this point.)
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@sgunhouse said in Vivaldi Rebooted my PC:
What's an A10 with no GPU - the GPU is part of the processor. My A10-6700P lists as 4 processor cores and 6 GPU cores.
My machine rebooted while Opera was running again a few hours ago, for some reason when it came up it had no wi-fi. Restart didn't fix it, after a proper shutdown and reboot it is now working again. (As I said before, either it is a Chromium issue or else unrelated - and I doubt it is unrelated at this point.)
I meant that I have no modular graphics card. The fact that the processor has an integrated solution, it's obvious.
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My PC rebooted again today. It definitely seems to be related to watching Video on YouTube.
I sent another crash dump.
Specs: AMD A10-6800K, 8 Gb on Win 10 64-bit • Snapshot 1.14.1047.3 (64-bit)
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this is what shows on the event log
The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x00000124 (0x0000000000000000, 0xffff8880e73568f8, 0x0000000000000000, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\Minidump\122717-25125-01.dmp. Report Id: 704ed9f7-7053-489a-860e-0c2480a9c544.
Literally only had vivaldi open at the time
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@scorpiopt115 said in Vivaldi Rebooted my PC:
this is what shows on the event log
The computer has rebooted from a bugcheck. The bugcheck was: 0x00000124 (0x0000000000000000, 0xffff8880e73568f8, 0x0000000000000000, 0x0000000000000000). A dump was saved in: C:\WINDOWS\Minidump\122717-25125-01.dmp. Report Id: 704ed9f7-7053-489a-860e-0c2480a9c544.
Literally only had vivaldi open at the time
This is a '124' fatal hardware error. The most common cause is overheating, though it also can occur from driver corruption, processor problems, AV/security program conflicts, and software interaction problems with hardware. The 2nd parameter in the parenthesis of your bugcheck result (0xffff8880e73568f8) is the address of the WHEA_ERROR_RECORD structure describing the error condition. WHEA is the Windows Hardware Error Architecture.
A sometimes useful strategy for troubleshooting 124 errors is described at: https://www.sevenforums.com/crash-lockup-debug-how/35349-stop-0x124-what-means-what-try.html While it's written directly about Win7, its recommendations are relevant for more recent OS's as well.
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i already ruled out overheating .also did :
-A full memory test came clean
-Tested my Hard drivers
-Stress tested my CPU and Graphics card
-Full AV and Spyware checks
-Run a Windows SFC scanall clean
Playing BF1 for 3 hours did not reboot this pc . same with encoding a video or watching blue ray .
Having vivaldi open = ban reboot at random -
@scorpiopt115 The nature of a 124 error is that it indicates either hardware failure or direct hardware involvement. That is, the error arises from something in the sysetm involving direct hardware operation or access, which could be the hardware itself or software code that has direct physical access to the hardware. That direct access is most commonly found in the hardware driver code modules and certain AV/security programs. If an 'ordinary' application program does somehow trigger a 124 error, it usually is because it somehow triggers a flaw in a driver or it conflicts with a security program flaw, such that that driver or security program actually faults the system with the 124 error. In such cases, unless a test system contains the exact same driver/security-program flaw, it will not exhibit the problem, since the application program's signals will fail to trigger the driver/security-programs in use on the test system.
The net effect is that it can be difficult to recreate the problem on a system other than the one exhibiting the original problem. Without re-creation, analysis of exact cause is very difficult. In such cases, expert analysis of full crash logs from the original system may help, but that quickly moves outside the normal limits of forums like this.
That Vivaldi seems to be the only program linked to the problem may be either because there is an actual flaw in Vivaldi or because it is somehow issuing unique legitimate command patterns that trigger a latent flaw in a driver or other hardware-touching code module on the affected system.
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The alarm can announce the magazine! In the case below.
NN with the fact that the issue with the rebooting the PC I found in the early fall, and then think and could not, what it is. Food thermal grease on the CPU load test with AIDA64, he played games and never in this moment where nothing happens. During the period of the survey, I have a Windows 10 Insider 1709 at the time. One Grail time for boy electricity but other devices do not produce any needles (problems). At some point Windows asked me to write a review about salt reboots the PC at the time when they appear almost like a week, and I replied that all is well. Then I began to suspect the saw system. Later I reinstalled the system to see the latest kato 1709 and after the restart they appeared again. I interviewed for a couple of months and just recently by chance found this topic in English forum wet and thought that can't be true, so the real Vivaldi. A week ago, my PC rebooted twice while I was wandering the pastor of the Internet and I particularly angry, then I installed Firefox, testers began to use your first day went well, not one reboot, but the next day it happened again, then I remembered about the service Vivadi update, which began with the system, disable it, my PC worked for 3 days without reboot, but on the 4 it happened again.
So I can say that Vivaldi is not SDS plays a key role perezagruski happen though with him, even without him. He may be Kato contributes to their acceleration because they can happen several times a day, but with them, I used them in Nablus for several days.
So I brought a SD video, the guys from Redmond are bad. Go back to 1703 to check it, while I have no desire, except for the updates until 1803, I will try. 2-3 weeks gives the result. He proved, as the days with Vivaldi and with the FireFox browser.My configuration: Windows 10, 1709, a10-7700K, 8GB.
Sorry for Tex, used a translator Yandex
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@broztyto said in Vivaldi Rebooted my PC:
Sorry for Tex, used a translator Yandex
It's pretty hard to understand. Maybe post the Russian version and then we can see Google or Bing can make better sense out of it. A few paragraph breaks would help too.
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The Russian version anymore. In short, guilty of reboots I do Windows but not Vivaldi (possibly can participate them, but certainly it is not the main problem), because with Firefox I got also the system is rebooted. You're also using Windows 10 1709?
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@broztyto I just got another reboot an hour ago to apply a Windows update for 1709 (Adobe Flash)
I got no warning message. Again, I was watching a YouTube video. I just used the Back Mouse Gesture, and my PC rebooted, corrupting my Veracrypt virtual drive.
It is a waste of about half an hour every time this happens.
- Create a new virtual drive volume
- Copy about 8 Gbytes of data from the corrupted drive to the new one
- Dismount the corrupted drive and the new drive
- Mount the drive with the new container file.
If Microsoft would just warn me to shut down my apps first, it would take only a few minutes.