• Welcome to Tux Reports: Where Penguins Fly. We hope you find the topics varied, interesting, and worthy of your time. Please become a member and join in the discussions.

WinXP Professional -Shutdown

A

AAH

Flightless Bird
When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts.
Can this command be corrected to shutdown
the windows and ultimately the computer.

This was working ok before. I tried to correct
it by system restore but it failed saying that
window did not shutdown properly. I also tried the "Last good config..." but
did not
correct it.
Any help would be appreciated.
 
R

Rey Santos

Flightless Bird
In Windows XP, the default setting is for the computer to reboot
automatically when a fatal error occurs. If that fatal error only occurs when
you're shutting down, the system reboots automatically.
If you haven't changed any of the system failure settings, you should be
able to see the error by looking in the Event Log. But a better long-term
solution is to turn off the automatic reboot so you can actually see the
error when it happens.

Windows XP Shut Down and Automatic Reboot Problems
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/helpandsupport/learnmore/russel_02may13.mspx
--
Rey


"AAH" wrote:

> When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts.
> Can this command be corrected to shutdown
> the windows and ultimately the computer.
>
> This was working ok before. I tried to correct
> it by system restore but it failed saying that
> window did not shutdown properly. I also tried the "Last good config..." but
> did not
> correct it.
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
>
> .
>
 
A

AAH

Flightless Bird
Rey

Thanks for your response.

The message on the screen came up

"Stop: c000021a {Fatal syystem error}

The article refers to Roxio Easy Cd Creator 5.
This software is not installed on this computer.
Can you help about the Fatal System Error?



"Rey Santos" <ReySantos@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:299055C2-2681-4312-9287-ACAE8E16DDBE@microsoft.com...
In Windows XP, the default setting is for the computer to reboot
automatically when a fatal error occurs. If that fatal error only occurs
when
you're shutting down, the system reboots automatically.
If you haven't changed any of the system failure settings, you should be
able to see the error by looking in the Event Log. But a better long-term
solution is to turn off the automatic reboot so you can actually see the
error when it happens.

Windows XP Shut Down and Automatic Reboot Problems
http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/helpandsupport/learnmore/russel_02may13.mspx
--
Rey


"AAH" wrote:

> When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts.
> Can this command be corrected to shutdown
> the windows and ultimately the computer.
>
> This was working ok before. I tried to correct
> it by system restore but it failed saying that
> window did not shutdown properly. I also tried the "Last good config..."

but
> did not
> correct it.
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
>
> .
>
 
P

Paul

Flightless Bird
AAH wrote:
> Rey
>
> Thanks for your response.
>
> The message on the screen came up
>
> "Stop: c000021a {Fatal syystem error}
>
> The article refers to Roxio Easy Cd Creator 5.
> This software is not installed on this computer.
> Can you help about the Fatal System Error?


It can also be caused by malware. You can see in this thread,
the person being helped, has multiple symptoms, only one of which
is getting c000021a on shutdown. (You don't just copy what
they're doing in threads like this, because the response from
the helper, is customized for just the person being helped.)

http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/forums/topic85810.html

Perhaps you could attempt to scan the computer with something.

This page has an entry for 0xC000021A, which shows you the
reason it could happen, but this won't address how many pieces
of malware that could be tipping over the system in the same way.

http://aumha.org/a/stop.htm

It's possible to do offline scans of the OS, using things like the
Kaspersky rescue CD. As long as your computer has an Internet connection
that support DHCP (like my ADSL modem), when the scanner CD boots,
it should be able to connect to the web site and get virus updates.
Then it can be used to scan your computer. The tool will normally
attempt to update the database, within about 30 seconds after the
OS on the CD is booted.

http://devbuilds.kaspersky-labs.com/devbuilds/RescueDisk/ 120,985,600 bytes
http://devbuilds.kaspersky-labs.com/devbuilds/RescueDisk10/ 208,261,120 bytes

Since these downloads are ISO9660 format, you use a tool like Nero,
ImgBurn, or CDburnerXP. The tool needs to know you want it to parse
the ISO file, and make a bootable CD from it.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_optical_disc_authoring_software

When you burn the first download to a CD using something like Nero or
ImgBurn, and boot the CD, the virus update will be somewhere around
a 70MB download. If you download the latest CD, the CD download
itself is larger, but the virus database update is about 7MB right now.
I just tried out the RescueDisk10 in a virtual machine, and
the scan is just as slow as the previous one. (The OS on the CD is
Gentoo, so it is Linux based.) The RescueDisk10 supports a text screen
mode, for times when the graphics aren't working (like in my virtual
machine window - a real PC should work better - I try to test in
a VM first). The older CD doesn't have as many modes, but I've used
the older one several times to scan my system. I used to have a Kaspersky
subscription, and at least its initial disinfection of my system was pretty
impressive. But the subscription version was so annoying, I didn't subscribe
the next year (almost as bad as UAC). The computer had become
"Kaspersky's machine" rather than "my machine". Since this is an
offline scanner, it isn't quite the same thing, but at least
it might tell you if there is malware present.

Paul

>
>
>
> "Rey Santos" <ReySantos@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:299055C2-2681-4312-9287-ACAE8E16DDBE@microsoft.com...
> In Windows XP, the default setting is for the computer to reboot
> automatically when a fatal error occurs. If that fatal error only occurs
> when
> you're shutting down, the system reboots automatically.
> If you haven't changed any of the system failure settings, you should be
> able to see the error by looking in the Event Log. But a better long-term
> solution is to turn off the automatic reboot so you can actually see the
> error when it happens.
>
> Windows XP Shut Down and Automatic Reboot Problems
> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/helpandsupport/learnmore/russel_02may13.mspx
 
R

Rey Santos

Flightless Bird
First try the The Last Known Good Configuration:
1. Start your computer.
2. When you see the "Please select the operating system to start" message,
press the F8 key.
3. When the Windows Advanced Options menu appears, use the ARROW keys to
select Last Known Good Configuration (your most recent settings that worked),
and then press ENTER.

If that failed, examine a couple of the latest dump files located in
c:/windows\minidump\Mini<date>-01.dmp , see this:
How to read the small memory dump files that Windows creates for debugging
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/315263

Under "Tools to read the small memory dump file" go to "Install debugging
tools"

Under "Open the dump file" (connected to the internet)
3. To load the dump file into a debugger... at the command prompt type:
windbg -y srv*c:/symbols*http://msdl.microsoft.com/download/symbols -i
c:/windows\i386 -z c:/windows\minidump\Mini<date>-01.dmp

The Command - Dump window will open
Note the heading "Probably caused by:"
Now click the blue !analyze -v
Note the headings "MODULE_NAME and IMAGE_NAME (scroll down)
The 3 headings noted should have similar entries indicating the problem
file. Google for that file to see which program or driver it belongs, then
you may try to uninstall and reinstall that program or driver for possible
file corruption or simply uninstall for incompatibility.

Good luck.



--
Rey


"AAH" wrote:

> Rey
>
> Thanks for your response.
>
> The message on the screen came up
>
> "Stop: c000021a {Fatal syystem error}
>
> The article refers to Roxio Easy Cd Creator 5.
> This software is not installed on this computer.
> Can you help about the Fatal System Error?
>
>
>
> "Rey Santos" <ReySantos@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:299055C2-2681-4312-9287-ACAE8E16DDBE@microsoft.com...
> In Windows XP, the default setting is for the computer to reboot
> automatically when a fatal error occurs. If that fatal error only occurs
> when
> you're shutting down, the system reboots automatically.
> If you haven't changed any of the system failure settings, you should be
> able to see the error by looking in the Event Log. But a better long-term
> solution is to turn off the automatic reboot so you can actually see the
> error when it happens.
>
> Windows XP Shut Down and Automatic Reboot Problems
> http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/using/helpandsupport/learnmore/russel_02may13.mspx
> --
> Rey
>
>
> "AAH" wrote:
>
> > When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts.
> > Can this command be corrected to shutdown
> > the windows and ultimately the computer.
> >
> > This was working ok before. I tried to correct
> > it by system restore but it failed saying that
> > window did not shutdown properly. I also tried the "Last good config..."

> but
> > did not
> > correct it.
> > Any help would be appreciated.
> >
> >
> > .
> >

>
>
> .
>
 
M

Mr Percy Verence

Flightless Bird
try restore from "safe mode"


"AAH" <aah@chakcomnet.net> wrote in message
news:%237UdDNZELHA.4120@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...
> When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts.
> Can this command be corrected to shutdown
> the windows and ultimately the computer.
>
> This was working ok before. I tried to correct
> it by system restore but it failed saying that
> window did not shutdown properly. I also tried the "Last good config..."
> but
> did not
> correct it.
> Any help would be appreciated.
>
>
 
V

VanguardLH

Flightless Bird
Mr Percy Verence wrote:

> AAH wrote ...
>
>> When I click the "Turn Off" window restarts. Can this command be
>> corrected to shutdown the windows and ultimately the computer.
>>
>> This was working ok before. I tried to correct it by system restore
>> but it failed saying that window did not shutdown properly. I also
>> tried the "Last good config..." but did not correct it.

>
> try restore from "safe mode"


After 50 days, it is highly unlikely that AAH is still monitoring this
thread.
 
Top