In the same Advanced Settings, go to Startup and Recovery \ Settings and then change the Write debugging information drop - down to «None» to disable
the kernel memory dump.
Kernel memory dump:
A kernel memory dump will be much smaller than a complete memory dump.
Automatic memory dump: This is the default option, and it contains the exact same information as
a kernel memory dump.
Crashes are usually caused by code running in kernel - mode, so the complete information including each program's memory is rarely useful —
a kernel memory dump will usually be sufficient even for a developer.
It can be helpful for identifying the error, but offers less detailed debugging information than
a kernel memory dump.
Microsoft says that, when the page file is set to a system - managed size and the computer is configured for automatic memory dumps, «Windows sets the size of the paging file large enough to ensure that
a kernel memory dump can be captured most of the time.»
Larger memory dumps like
kernel memory dumps and complete memory dumps are stored at C: \ Windows \ MEMORY.DMP by default.
This diagnostic collects both full /
kernel memory dumps (memory.dmp), last five machine mini dumps from the past -LSB-...]
Not exact matches
Sure — you will get a less accurate
memory dump (with some zeros here and there), but won't this still mean you can get a somewhat estimated guess of the
kernel memory contents?