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This is meant to be in the lightroom classic community, but creating a new post results in it being blocked for spam. So its here.
Recently, I upgraded my computer and after adding new hardware, lightroom classic started to crash, causing my whole computer to crash, the crashing appears to be kinda random. My mouse could still move around but everything slowly grinds to a halt (all windows functions stop to work until my mouse freezes, a window comes up to stop the process which is not responding, my wallpaper also becomes black), and my whole computer becomes unusable instantly, requiring a power cycle.
I changed my CPU, RAM and motherboard as described below:
Before:
Motherboard -> unknown but I can find out if required (intel I think)
CPU -> Intel i5-2500S @ 2.5GHz
RAM -> Unknown DDR3 memory.
After:
Motherboard -> Asus tuf b450m-plus gaming
CPU -> AMD Ryzen 3 3200g
RAM -> Corsair lpx vengeance 2x 8GB
Other hardware (unchanged):
GPU -> GTX 750 ti
Running Windows 10 64 bit
My OS is installed on a 120GB SSD (some adobe files are on this, such as creative cloud location), I also have a 2TB drive for games (which I play with absolutely no problem) and programs (where lightroom is installed), and 1TB drive for storing photos.
I'm pretty confident I have fully tried all the proposed fixes from the support page: https://helpx.adobe.com/uk/x-productkb/global/troubleshoot-system-errors-freezes-windows.html
I have installed all the latest drivers, GPU driver from GeForce experience, and others from https://www.asus.com/us/Motherboards/TUF-B450M-PLUS-GAMING/HelpDesk_Download/(updating BIOS, audio, LAN and chipset drivers). Checking others with device manager.
After diagnosing hardware, then drivers, my computer went into a strange BDOS boot loop, so I just decided to reinstall windows as I had nothing to lose and wanted a fresh start anyway.
Running lightroom on the new install didn't seem to fix the problem but then I removed my GPU and it worked.
I decided to put the GPU back in and install the latest driver and I haven't had a problem with it so far (its been running for far longer than before), so I think the problem is fixed.
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Hi there,
We are sorry about the experience with Lightroom Classic on your computer changing the hardware.
Would you mind confirming if you re-installed Windows and the applications from scratch after changing the hardware or did you use some sort of a cloning/migration software to migrate the data?
Since you might have already tried uninstalling and re-installing the application, you can try creating a new user account on the computer to check if the issue persists there as well.
Please check: https://support.microsoft.com/en-in/help/4026923/windows-10-create-a-local-user-or-administrator-acc...
Regards,
Nikunj
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"My OS is installed on a 120GB SSD (some adobe files are on this, such as creative cloud location)"
How much free space do you have on the 120GB C: drive?
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Only about 10GB, do you think this could be part of the problem?
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Thanks for the response,
As I am using the same drives as with my previous motherboard/cpu, I've continued to use the same harddrive/ssd combination.
I have tried creating a new account, with admin rights, and this still doesn't seem to fix the problem.
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Computer crashes are almost always hardware or bad drivers. You need to run diagnostics on your hardware (all of it) and also make sure the drivers are up-to-date (reinstall them to make sure the currently installed driver is not corrupted).
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"Only about 10GB, do you think this could be part of the problem?"
That is most definetely a problem. I suggest getting at least a 256GB SSD as a minium. For now you can move the LR Catalog folder to the 1TB or 4TB drive. Do this with LR closed and then when you relaunch you'll need to manaully point to the new catalog folder location Lightroom Catalog.lrcat file (i.e. showing as missing).
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I see, however my catalog and photos, along with lightroom it self are all on the other hard-drives. Only the creative cloud and I'd image some caches are on my SSD.
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I only mentioned moving the LR Catalog folder because it's normally installed on a faster (SSD) system drive. The objective was to free up space on the C: drive, which it sounds like is not possible. The solution is to purchase a 256GB or larger SSD and clone over the current drive to the new drive. Most SSDs come with cloning software that make it easy. This M.2 NVMe 500GB SSD is a good choice for price/performance.
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In my experience, lack of space on a disk doesn't cause the symptoms mentioned and doesn't cause computer crashes. Normally, if there's a problem due to disk space, you get a message indicating the disk is running out of space. Sometimes it causes slowness as well, but not crashes.
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I said, "That is most definetely a problem" and something the OP appears to be "working around" by installing LR, the LR Catalog, and perhaps the Camera Raw Cache on a non-system drive. That should be fixed by installing a larger system drive, installing LR and its components on that drive, and then if the system is still crashing we can investigate further. It makes no sense to do that now unless the C: drive can be freed up and maintained with at least 50GB of unused space. Even then LR perfomance will suffer due to LR and it's components installed on a slower drive.
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OK but in my mind, this won't fix the computer crashing randomly problem, as that's not a symptom of a nearly full disk. Also, the symptom of mouse moving slowly doesn't depend on disk space at all. Seems like there are two problems that need to be fixed.
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After diagnosing hardware, then drivers, my computer went into a strange BDOS boot loop, so I just decided to reinstall windows as I had nothing to lose and wanted a fresh start anyway.
Running lightroom on the new install didn't seem to fix the problem but then I removed my GPU and it worked.
I decided to put the GPU back in and install the latest driver and I haven't had a problem with it so far (its been running for far longer than before), so I think the problem is fixed.
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Just out of curiosity how much free space do you have now on your C: drive?
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To anyone that doesn't know computers well, reinstalling windows should be a last resort and only if your a professional and need to do it as a living. To anybody that doesn't know, reinstalling windows removes ALL your files, photos, and games and makes your computer have nothing on it. I ran into this issue and just updated my gpu drivers and the lastest windows updates, which fixed it.
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You’ve posted to an ancient thread. It is highly unlikely that the issue described in this thread, though not impossible, is the same one you are currently experiencing. Rather than resurrect an old thread that is seemingly similar, you are better off posting to a new thread with fresh, complete information, including system information, a complete description of the problem, and step-by-step instructions for reproduction.
If the issue is the same, we will merge you back into the appropriate location.
Thank you!