Maintenance
35
Q: Can existing PXIe/PXI/
c
PCI peripheral modules and drivers be
used with a Thunderbolt 3 PXIe chassis such as the
PXIe-62314T
? Are there any required modifications?
A: The existing drivers based on PCI/PCI Express software
framework are natively supported by Thunderbolt 3 host PCs
and PXIe chassis. However, when any installed peripheral
module driver does not support hot-plugging, especially any
peripheral modules using legacy IO address system resources,
please use the standard power on/off procedures described in
the Installation section.
Q: How to identify the cause of a Windows BSOD?
A: This can happen easily when hot-plugging a Thunderbolt 3
connection when any driver installed on the host PC does not
support dynamic resource allocation properly.
Steps for technical troubleshooting:
1) Configure the Windows 10 BSOD dump file settings.
2) Reproduce the BSOD issue to generate the BSOD dump file
3) Analyze the dump file with WinDbg tools in the Windows
SDK.
4) Find the driver or procedure that triggered the BSOD.
NOTE:
NOTE:
The results found here may be not the actual root cause, and
may only indicate the point where Windows BSOD occured.
The root cause could be something else. Troubleshooting to
identify and determine the actual root cause depends on condi-
tions. Please refer to this Microsoft article: Blue Screen Data -
Windows drivers | Microsoft Docs.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/driv-
ers/debugger/blue-screen-data
Summary of Contents for Thunderbolt PXIe-62314T
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