Sometimes the "IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL" message is a hardware driver issue...
Now is a great time to point you to one of the easiest ways to find
information on problems you may be having and solutions others have found:
Search using Google!
http://www.google.com/
(How-to: http://www.google.com/intl/en/help/basics.html )
Example:
http://www.google.com/search?q=Windows+XP+Installation+0x0000000A
Which leads you to:
You receive a "Stop 0x0000000A" error message in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314063
My suggestions are to reseat your memory and processor, remove any
extraneous devices from the computer (internally and externally - like sound
cards, video capture cards, external hard disk drives, printers, etc) and
make sure you have the latest hard disk drive controller drivers loaded (you
may need to perform an F6 install with the latest drivers for your hard disk
drive controller.)
Another suggestion would be to make sure you have the latest motherboard
BIOS from the motherboard manufacturer. On occassion - SP2 and above may be
incompatible with certain motherboard BIOS versions.
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
There were no other hard drives, printers, etc connected. The XP-Pro disk
is a full version.
I then did a Google search on the above error message. There is a knowledge
base article available, and files, but they appear to require a completed
Windows install to run. I would not know how to proceed to use them. I
wonder if there's a work-around?
Tom -
I'm trying to solve the same error message, but under a different set of
circumstances. There is a MS tool that supposedly reads the dump produced by the
exception. Google for WindowsXP-KB923800-x86-ENU.exe
It sounds like you have an unbootable machine, so can you put that drive into another
box, run the tool and point it at the dump?
It will not work with SP3, which is what I'm rasslin with.
HTH
Mike
"MikeR" wrote:
> Tom B wrote:
> >>> This Windows XP-Pro computer has a new hard drive, and I am reinstalling
> >>> everything. The install from the XP disk runs OK until the screen says there
> >>> are 37 minutes left for the install. Then a blue screen appears with the
> >>> error message "IRQL_NOT_LESS_OR_EQUAL." The blue screen says to make sure
> >>> any new hardware or software is properly installed, etc. It suggests
> >>> disabling BIOS memory options such as caching or shadowing, but I don't see
> >>> any options for that in my Setup. The blue screen shows a stop code of
> >>> 0x0000000A. I'm looking for someone with experience with this error message
> >>> to let me know what to do next.
> >>>
>
> Tom -
> I'm trying to solve the same error message, but under a different set of
> circumstances. There is a MS tool that supposedly reads the dump produced by the
> exception. Google for WindowsXP-KB923800-x86-ENU.exe
> It sounds like you have an unbootable machine,
The attempted installation of Windows XP Pro does boot, but only to continue
the installation. That's where I get the report that it will finish
installing in 30+ minutes. I get the blue screen with the above error
message after this appears to work.
so can you put that drive into another
> box, run the tool and point it at the dump?
I regret that I can't, as the machine I am working with has SATA drives, and
the only other machine that's available has IDE drives.
> It will not work with SP3, which is what I'm rasslin with.
The Windows XP-Pro disk I am using is a full version, but is version 1a.
The previous install of it on the old HD upgraded to SP3 through the Internet.
> HTH
> Mike
>
Do you happen to be installing from the original Windows XP CD (commercially
manufactured) or perhaps a backup / working copy of the CD (made with CD-R
burning software)? If this is the case, try installing from the original CD
or go out and get a newer CD drive.
I used to have install problems during the Windows Vista beta testing days
with installing from a home-burnt CD (DVD in that case) and trying to read
it with an old DVD drive. They went away when up swapped the drive for a
current DVD-RW drive.
"Ian" wrote:
> Another thing to consider...
>
> Do you happen to be installing from the original Windows XP CD (commercially
> manufactured) or perhaps a backup / working copy of the CD (made with CD-R
> burning software)? If this is the case, try installing from the original CD
> or go out and get a newer CD drive.
It is the original Microsoft manufactured disk. The only brand name on it
is Microsoft.
>
> I used to have install problems during the Windows Vista beta testing days
> with installing from a home-burnt CD (DVD in that case) and trying to read
> it with an old DVD drive. They went away when up swapped the drive for a
> current DVD-RW drive.
>
I'm confident that my DVD drive is working.
Do not listen or do what Andrew E has posted. He does not know what he is saying and not most of the time but all of the time
Shenan has correctly given you the path for the answer
--
Peter
Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.
"Tom B" <To...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:4823CA99-5B32-4291...@microsoft.com...
I suspect the problem is hardware, maybe a bad memory stick, but I'm not
sure yet.
In this particular thread? No.
(Until now.)
In this entire conversation? Yes.
Less than three hours after the original question was asked, the first
response.
See the entire conversation archived indefinitely here:
http://groups.google.com/group/microsoft.public.windowsxp.setup_deployment/browse_frm/thread/cd4c1d76cedfd57d/b7e8e4c2cba2c862?tvc=1#b7e8e4c2cba2c862
What I originally posted was this:
Apparently there are no easy solutions.
Here's the search
http://www.google.com/search?q=0x8051AA58&sourceid=ie7&rls=com.microsoft:en-US&ie=utf8&oe=utf8
http://www.winsupersite.com/showcase/windowsxp_sp2_slipstream.asp