MKAsok Posted February 26, 2010 Share Posted February 26, 2010 I've been trying to network my old laptop with my new laptop and beyond all the usual hassles with connecting a Win 7 machine to a Win XP machine/firewall issues etc. (now solved), I've run into a weird problem. When I try and share the root of C: on the old machine, I'm getting a fatal error: Bad_Pool_Header Stop: 0x00000019. The paramerters are: 0x000000201, 0x8832B000, 0x8831BA00, 0x0B400000. I'm pretty much certain this is not a hardware problem, since the machine is running normally in all other respects and the issue is not random: it only happens when attempting to share the drive. The old machine is a Vaio, Win XP SP3, Intel T2050 Dual Core, 2GB RAM. I have a vague suspicion the problem is being caused by a corrupt registry entry relating to Generic Volumes, but I'm not sure. Anyone got any ideas? Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
welo Posted February 26, 2010 Share Posted February 26, 2010 You should get a more detailed cause of the BSOD, google or use this guide here. How did you try to share the drive? You could try to access the built-in administrative share. welo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MKAsok Posted February 26, 2010 Author Share Posted February 26, 2010 ^Thanks welo - I'll try and have a look at the dump file. Administrative shares seems an option, but I'd like to solve this issue. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JSixpack Posted February 26, 2010 Share Posted February 26, 2010 Update all the drivers. Pull the memory, clean the contacts, and reinstall--that's a memory issue you have there, pal. But don't bother with sharing. I rarely do, not worth hassling around w/ a lot of BS. Just use FTP (Filezilla clients/server) or UltraVNC, instant file sharing/remote control w/ file sharing. Quick 'n' easy. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MKAsok Posted February 26, 2010 Author Share Posted February 26, 2010 ^Thanks JS. As I said, I doubted it was a hardware issue since it was not happening randomly, but I fully agree with your sentiments on sharing. It's a pain in the nuts. I'm going to use UltraVNC I reckon. I think I finally traced the issue (by using the dump file as welo suggested, thanks again) to an old piece of software called Lockbox. Uninstalled it and all is well. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
welo Posted February 27, 2010 Share Posted February 27, 2010 Glad it worked. Thanks for reporting back, always interesting to hear what the actual root of the problem was. welo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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