The driver Driver WUDFRd failed to load for the device ACPI PNP0A0A 2&daba3ff&2. Event ID: 219, Kernel-PnP. That lead me to the driver AMDA00 Interface, which seems to be the root of the problem, I have tried to update the driver and even my BIOS, I have even reseated my PSU and motherboard and GPU and RAM. ACPIPNP0A0A device driver for Windows 7, XP, 10, 8, and 8.1.
ok so basically I recently upgrading my OS to windows 10 and about 2 weeks after I upgraded it my computer started to randomly turn off during games like mad max and rocket league, the just yesterday 14/8/2015, I downgraded back to windows 7 thinking that it would help, but the issue is still there.
After a google search and a look on event viewer this warning message came up
The driver DriverWUDFRd failed to load for the device ACPIPNP0A0A2&daba3ff&2.
Event ID: 219, Kernel-PnP.
that lead me to the driver AMDA00 Interface, which seems to be the root of the problem, I have tried to update the driver and even my BIOS, I have even reseated my PSU and motherboard and GPU and RAM.
what will happen is when I shut down my computer, it will shut down fine but a few seconds later I'll press the power button and the computer will power up, then a few seconds later it'll turn off and start to power on again, but after this it doesn't boot, it's just powered on but nothing is showing up on my screen and 2 of my chassis fans (that are connected to the motherboard) don't power on, and to get the computer to work again I either have to wait like 30 minutes or pull out the power cable and hold the power button for a few seconds and wait like 10 - 15 minutes, then it'll boot up fine, and this happens everytime I shut down or it'll happen randomly during a game, I'll lose all power then it'll do the failed reboot thing.
here are my specs:
OS Name Microsoft Windows 7 Home Basic
Version 6.1.7601 Service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation
System Manufacturer ASUS
System Model All Series
System Type x64-based PC
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4670K CPU @ 3.40GHz, 3398 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)
BIOS Version/Date American Megatrends Inc. 2103, 8/15/2014
SMBIOS Version 2.7
Windows Directory C:Windows
System Directory C:Windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume1
Locale United States
Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = '6.1.7601.17514'
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 4.00 GB
motherboard: Z87 Plus
GPU: AMD radeon 200 series
Can anyone help me?
All help is appreciated
Thanks
Dylan
-->After a google search and a look on event viewer this warning message came up
The driver DriverWUDFRd failed to load for the device ACPIPNP0A0A2&daba3ff&2.
Event ID: 219, Kernel-PnP.
that lead me to the driver AMDA00 Interface, which seems to be the root of the problem, I have tried to update the driver and even my BIOS, I have even reseated my PSU and motherboard and GPU and RAM.
what will happen is when I shut down my computer, it will shut down fine but a few seconds later I'll press the power button and the computer will power up, then a few seconds later it'll turn off and start to power on again, but after this it doesn't boot, it's just powered on but nothing is showing up on my screen and 2 of my chassis fans (that are connected to the motherboard) don't power on, and to get the computer to work again I either have to wait like 30 minutes or pull out the power cable and hold the power button for a few seconds and wait like 10 - 15 minutes, then it'll boot up fine, and this happens everytime I shut down or it'll happen randomly during a game, I'll lose all power then it'll do the failed reboot thing.
here are my specs:
OS Name Microsoft Windows 7 Home Basic
Version 6.1.7601 Service Pack 1 Build 7601
Other OS Description Not Available
OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation
System Manufacturer ASUS
System Model All Series
System Type x64-based PC
Processor Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4670K CPU @ 3.40GHz, 3398 Mhz, 4 Core(s), 4 Logical Processor(s)
BIOS Version/Date American Megatrends Inc. 2103, 8/15/2014
SMBIOS Version 2.7
Windows Directory C:Windows
System Directory C:Windowssystem32
Boot Device DeviceHarddiskVolume1
Locale United States
Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = '6.1.7601.17514'
Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 4.00 GB
motherboard: Z87 Plus
GPU: AMD radeon 200 series
Can anyone help me?
All help is appreciated
Thanks
Dylan
The Windows ACPI driver, Acpi.sys, is an inbox component of the Windows operating system. The responsibilities of Acpi.sys include support for power management and Plug and Play (PnP) device enumeration. On hardware platforms that have an ACPI BIOS, the HAL causes Acpi.sys to be loaded during system startup at the base of the device tree. Acpi.sys acts as the interface between the operating system and the ACPI BIOS. Acpi.sys is transparent to the other drivers in the device tree.
Other tasks performed by Acpi.sys on a particular hardware platform might include reprogramming the resources for a COM port or enabling the USB controller for system wake-up.
In this topic
ACPI devices
The hardware platform vendor specifies a hierarchy of ACPI namespaces in the ACPI BIOS to describe the hardware topology of the platform. For more information, see ACPI Namespace Hierarchy.
For each device described in the ACPI namespace hierarchy, the Windows ACPI driver, Acpi.sys, creates either a filter device object (filter DO) or a physical device object (PDO). If the device is integrated into the system board, Acpi.sys creates a filter device object, representing an ACPI bus filter, and attaches it to the device stack immediately above the bus driver (PDO). For other devices described in the ACPI namespace but not on the system board, Acpi.sys creates the PDO. Acpi.sys provides power management and PnP features to the device stack by means of these device objects. For more information, see Device Stacks for an ACPI Device.
A device for which Acpi.sys creates a device object is called an ACPI device. The set of ACPI devices varies from one hardware platform to the next, and depends on the ACPI BIOS and the configuration of the motherboard. Note that Acpi.sys loads an ACPI bus filter only for a device that is described in the ACPI namespace and is permanently connected to the hardware platform (typically, this device is integrated into the core silicon or soldered to the system board). Not all motherboard devices have an ACPI bus filter.
All ACPI functionality is transparent to higher-level drivers. These drivers must make no assumptions about the presence or absence of an ACPI filter in any given device stack.
Acpi.sys and the ACPI BIOS support the basic functions of an ACPI device. To enhance the functionality of an ACPI device, the device vendor can supply a WDM function driver. For more information, see Operation of an ACPI Device Function Driver.
![Pnp0a0a Pnp0a0a](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125691410/490910716.png)
An ACPI device is specified by a definition block in the system description tables in the ACPI BIOS. A device's definition block specifies, among other things, an operation region, which is a contiguous block of device memory that is used to access device data. Only Acpi.sys modifies the data in an operation region. The device's function driver can read the data in an operation region but must not modify the data. When called, an operation region handler transfers bytes in the operation region to and from the data buffer in Acpi.sys. The combined operation of the function driver and Acpi.sys is device-specific and is defined in the ACPI BIOS by the hardware vendor. In general, the function driver and Acpi.sys access particular areas in an operation region to perform device-specific operations and retrieve information. For more information, see Supporting an Operation Region.
![Pciven_8086&dev_8c22&subsys_85341043&rev_05 Pciven_8086&dev_8c22&subsys_85341043&rev_05](http://i.imgur.com/f7A0D2C.png)
ACPI control methods
ACPI control methods are software objects that declare and define simple operations to query and configure ACPI devices. Control methods are stored in the ACPI BIOS and are encoded in a byte-code format called ACPI Machine Language (AML). The control methods for a device are loaded from the system firmware into the device's ACPI namespace in memory, and interpreted by the Windows ACPI driver, Acpi.sys.
To invoke a control method, the kernel-mode driver for an ACPI device initiates an IRP_MJ_DEVICE_CONTROL request, which is handled by Acpi.sys. For drivers loaded on ACPI-enumerated devices, Acpi.sys always implements the physical device object (PDO) in the driver stack. For more information, see Evaluating ACPI Control Methods.
ACPI specification
For the latest Advanced Configuration and Power Interface Specification, see the ACPI 5.0 specification available from the Unified Extensible Firmware Interface Forum website.Revision 5.0 of the ACPI specification introduces a set of features to support low-power, mobile PCs that are based on System on a Chip (SoC) integrated circuits and that implement the connected standby power model. Starting with Windows 8 and Windows 8.1, the Windows ACPI driver, Acpi.sys, supports the new features in the ACPI 5.0 specification. For more information, see Windows ACPI design guide for SoC platforms.
ACPI debugging
System integrators and ACPI device driver developers can use the Microsoft AMLI debugger to debug AML code. Because AML is an interpreted language, AML debugging requires special software tools. Checked versions of the Windows ACPI driver, Acpi.sys, contain a debugger component to support AML debugging. For more information about the AMLI debugger, see ACPI Debugging. For information about how to download a checked build of Windows, see Downloading a Checked Build of Windows. For information about compiling ACPI Source Language (ASL) into AML, see Microsoft ASL Compiler.