Quote:
Originally posted by VisionIT
NoteMe's right, almost... :p
All Windows 95 versions older than OSR2 operate on a FAT16 partition, and in some cases... FAT12.
Here is a table showing the maximum partition size to get clusters of a given size. You cannot format any HD in DOS with less than a cluster size of 2k.
4K (4096 bytes) 16 MB FAT12
2K (2048 bytes) 32 MB FAT16 (DOS versions < 4.0)
2K (2048 bytes) 128 MB FAT16 (DOS versions >= 4.0)
4K (4096 bytes) 256 MB FAT16
8K (8192 bytes) 512 MB FAT16
16K (16384 bytes) 1 GB FAT16
32K (32768 bytes) 2 GB FAT16
Kernel32.DLL protection faults can be caused by litterally anything, so it's hard to narrow it down. It could be a memory leak in the kernel, or an uninitialised critical section under a Win32 sub-section. Here are a few fault addresses for you to compare with your error.
4.03.1216 '0157:BFF79F97' 95 4.00.950B or C
4.03.1212 '0157:BFF79FA4' 95 4.00.950B (OSR 2.1)
4.00.1112 '0137:BFF99C00' 95 4.00.950B (OSR 2)
4.00.1111 '0137:BFF9A3C0' 95 4.00.950B (OSR 2)
4.00.952 '0137:BFF998AC' 95 4.00.950A
4.00.951 '0137:BFF9A08C' 95 4.00.950A
4.00.950 '0137:BFF9A07C' 95 4.00.950A
If any of the addresses marked ' ' match your error, you have a kernel critical section missing... and you will need to upgrade it via the Microsoft website. The file you will need is
"KRNLUPD.EXE"
Can you give a more specific breakdown of when and where it crashes... it'll make life an awfull lot easier. :)
Hope this helps you.
Regards,
Paul.
the oringal hard drive was 2GB, but I also tried a 512 MB hard drive.