This article provides general troubleshooting steps to
isolate problems that are related to the video driver or subsystem. Symptoms of
display problems may appear in Publisher as the following:
Computer fails (general protection faults or invalid page
faults)
How to Determine Whether Display Driver is Causing a Problem
Windows 9x
Test the problem in Safe Mode. Start Microsoft Windows 9x
in Safe Mode, a diagnostic mode of Windows 9x, and attempt to reproduce the
problem you are having. To do this, follow these steps:
On the Windows Start menu, and then click Shut Down.
In the Shut Down Windows dialog box, click Restart The Computer.
When you see the "Starting Window 9x" message, press
F8.
NOTE: If the Windows 9x splash screen appears, repeat steps a through
c.
Select the Safe mode option.
-or-
If you are running a shared copy of Microsoft Publisher, select
the "Safe mode with network support" option.
Windows 9x will start in
Safe Mode without network support. The words "Safe Mode" appear in all four
corners of the screen.
Test the problem. If the problem goes away, your video
driver may be the cause. When you run Windows in Safe Mode, Windows uses
default settings (VGA monitor, no network, Microsoft mouse driver, and the
minimum device drivers required to start Windows). Therefore, the problem could
be related to any software that extends the functionality of these default
settings.
If the problem does not go away, this usually indicates the
problem is not related to the video driver or video subsystem.
After you finish this procedure, restart your computer,
and start Windows as you normally do.
Change the display driver to VGA. To do this, follow these
steps:NOTE: Some display adapters are not compatible with the Windows 9x
standard display driver. If you are not sure whether your display adapter is
compatible with the VGA display driver, please consult the video adapter
manufacturer.
On the Windows Start menu, point to Settings, and click Control Panel.
Double-click Display.
Click the Settings tab.
Click Change Display Type. Write down all information regarding your current adapter. You
will need this information when you restore your original settings.
Under Adapter Type, click Change. Click Show All Devices.
In the Manufacturers box, click Standard Display Types. This option should be at the
top of the Manufacturer's list.
In the Models box, click Standard Display Adapter (VGA), and click OK.
Click Close.
Click Close again. If you are prompted to restart Windows 9x, click
Yes.
Test the problem. If the problem goes away, your
problem is related to your video driver or subsystem.
: Some display adapters are not compatible with the Windows
9x standard display driver. If you are not sure whether your display adapter is
compatible with the VGA display driver, please consult the video adapter
manufacturer. Check for any conflicts in Device Manager. In some cases, a hardware conflict may present itself as a video
problem.
On the Windows Start menu, point to Settings, and click Control Panel.
Double-click the System icon.
Click the Device Manager tab.
Look for a problem with any installed device. If there
is a problem with a device, you will see one of the following symbols on the
device icon:
Black exclamation point (!)
Red "X"
Blue "i"
NOTE: Some sound cards and video adapters do not report all the
resources they are using to Windows, and therefore, cause Device Manager to show only one device in conflict or no conflicts at all. To
verify whether this is the case, disable the sound card or use the standard VGA
video driver to see if the conflict is resolved. (This is a known problem with
S3 video cards and 16-bit Sound Blaster sound cards or sound cards using Sound
Blaster emulation for Sound Blaster compatibility.)
For additional troubleshooting information, please see the
following articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
127139
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/127139/EN-US/
)
Troubleshooting
video problems in Windows
133240
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/133240/EN-US/
)
Troubleshooting Device Conflicts with Device Manager
Windows NT
Test the problem in Windows NT VGA mode. To do so, follow
these steps:
On the Windows Start menu, click Shut Down.
Click Restart The Computer. Click Yes.
When the OS Loader menu appears, select the following
option:
Windows NT Version (Server or Workstation) 4.00 [VGA mode]
and then press ENTER.
Test the problem. If the problem does not occur, you
may have a problem with the installed video driver. Please consult the video
adapter manufacturer to obtain an updated video driver.
For additional troubleshooting information, please see the
following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
155681
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/155681/EN-US/
)
Troubleshooting Display Problems in Windows NT 4.0
What to Do If Your Display Driver Is Causing a Problem
Windows 9x
To determine if you are running a 32-bit video driver,
follow these steps:
On the Windows Start menu, click Run.
In the Open box, type system.ini, and click OK.
Locate the display.drv= line in the [boot] section of
the System.ini file. If you are using a 32-bit display driver, the display.drv
line will look like this:
Display.drv=Pnpdrvr.drv
If the Display.drv line does not look like the previous one, you
are using a 16-bit display driver. If you are running a 16-bit video driver,
contact the manufacturer of the video driver and obtain a 32-bit driver
designed for Windows 9x (if one is available).
NOTE: Replacing the video driver will not solve the problem if
something else is conflicting with the correct operation of the video
driver.
Modify the Advanced Graphics Settings.
On the Windows Start menu, point to Settings, and then click Control Panel.
Double-click the System icon.
Click the Performance tab.
Under Advanced Settings, click Graphics.
Note the position of the Hardware Acceleration slider. Move the slider one position to the left to decrease
hardware acceleration.
Restart your computer and test the problem again. If
the problem does not go away, repeat steps a through e, moving the Hardware Acceleration slider one position to the left until it is set to
none.
Obtain a different display driver.
Contact your
display adapter vendor and obtain an updated Windows 9x display
driver.
Reinstall your video driver.
Reinstall Windows 9x
and select the Verify option.
Windows NT
Make sure that your video adapter is on the Hardware
Compatibility List.
Contact your display adapter vendor and obtain an updated
Windows NT display driver.