Pegasus (MVP) wrote:
> "Philip" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:IfOdnaTCef3-(E-Mail Removed)...
>> Pegasus (MVP) wrote:
>>> "Philip" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>>> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>>>> I have been trying to back up my XP home desktop to a network
>>>> server/drive.
>>>>
>>>> I have tried ntbackup.exe and NasBackup. However, in both cases, they
>>>> get a good deal into backing up 5-10 GB when the system spontaneously
>>>> reboots (just like a "reboot now" command when installing software).
>>>>
>>>> When the system recovers, and I re-log in, I get the send error dialog
>>>> which follows with a serious hardware failure web page ironically
>>>> advising me to back up my disk.
>>>>
>>>> I ran a disk check diagnostic (C: Properties, Tools tab, Check Now) and
>>>> had no problems. Everything seems fine. Never any problem like this
>>>> before.
>>>>
>>>> Any thoughts as to track down the cause of this.
>>> I can think of a couple of possible causes:
>>> - You have a memory leak. Observing the Task Manager when the backup
>>> process approaches the critical time would reveal this.
>>> - There is a conflict with some third-party program. Disconnect your
>>> network from the Internet, then use msconfig.exe to kill all
>>> non-essential
>>> programs ***and services*** before running the backup process.
>>> Firewalls and virus scanners can do this sort of thing.
>> I ran the back up with just task manager running, nothing else. Memory
>> utilization stayed constant at 30%. I did not see anything that looked
>> like a leak. The cpu load never got over 40%.
>>
>> It always seems to fail when backing up my directory tree of jpeg
>> photographs. It never fails when other directories are backed up. It
>> almost sees like whenever a particular disk area is accessed it triggers
>> the fault. I say this because every back up mechanism I try always fails:
>> NasBackup, NTbackup.exe, Nero BackItUp ...
>
> Good observation. In this situation I would do this:
> 1. Demonstrate that the crash can be caused by backup up this folder.
> 2. Copy this folder to some other folder. Does this cause a crash too?
> If not, what's the difference between copying and backing up?
> 3. Run one of your backups on the copied folder. Does it crash the
> machine?
Thank you for the suggestions, I think I have the culprit.
I made a new folder and did a drag-n-drop-copy of the photograph
directory into it. Watching it closely, it crashed as I was fortuitously
watching the filename on the copy dialog. Recovering from the crash, I
manually selected and attempted to drag-n-drop-copy that one file to the
new folder, and it crashed again! Recovering from the crash, I then
attempted to copy the all the remaining files. NO problem. I then tried
to copy this one file again, it crashed! I then tried to backup the
copied folder without this file, NO problem. Then I deleted the specific
file and was able to backup the original folder.
What would be in a jpeg that would cause a system crash that records a
hardware failure in the event log?
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