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NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 Kernel Panics/Freezes in Lion & late Snow Leopard

I've found some other reports of these freezes scattered about the forums, but usually other people come in and post something about unrelated video cards. So this thread is specific to NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 running OS X Lion (10.7-10.7.3), to avoid confusion and cross-polination of different issues.


Hardware Overview:


Model Name: iMac

Model Identifier: iMac9,1

Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo

Processor Speed: 3.06 GHz

Number of Processors: 1

Total Number of Cores: 2

L2 Cache: 6 MB

Memory: 8 GB

Bus Speed: 1.07 GHz

Boot ROM Version: IM91.008D.B08

SMC Version (system): 1.37f3


NVIDIA GeForce GT 130:


Chipset Model: NVIDIA GeForce GT 130

Type: GPU

Bus: PCIe

PCIe Lane Width: x16

VRAM (Total): 512 MB

Vendor: NVIDIA (0x10de)

Device ID: 0x062e

Revision ID: 0x00a1

ROM Revision: 3370



Since upgrading to Lion I have had many issues with crashes and kernel panics characterized by the following symptoms, listed here in detail so that people can find them when they search:


  • Pixellation - colored pixels appear in different areas of the screen, in seemingly random bunches.
  • Mosaics - squares appear redrawn in the wrong part of the screen. Sometimes these squares are large, other times tiny.
  • Recovery - sometimes the system recovers once it starts doing these. Other times it just keeps going until it freezes/panics.
  • Kernel Panics - I've only had the "grey screen" appear once or twice. Usually there is a complete system lockup before this can happen, and I have to reboot the system manually.


Some solutions/attempts to solve:


  • Turn off Energy Saving - This is horrible for the monitor and can lead to burn-in, but I found that many of my crashes occured when the system was trying to recover from "screen sleep". So now I run a screen saver instead, which doesn't seem to trigger it as much.
  • Screen Saver - Sometimes I can "refresh" the system by turning on the screen saver and then coming back. Other times, this doesn't work and the pixellation/mosaic remains. Sometimes I can't even initialize the screen saver at all (in which case a total freeze usually occurs right after).
  • Rebooting - seems to clear things up for a while, but inevitably, the problem resurfaces.
  • Running Windows - Not really a solution, but I have had absolutely no issues with this behavior while running Windows 7 on this same machine (under Bootcamp).
  • Downgrading to Snow Leopard - I have not attempted this, but I've read others say that their crashes went away when they did. I would like some more concrete evidence on this if anyone has it.


My diagnosis so far:


OS X Lion's NVIDIA driver kernel extensions (kexts) seem to be faulty with this GPU. The Windows drivers for this GPU work better on Apple's own hardware than OS X Lion's. Anectodal evidence indicates that Snow Leopard's drivers (at least up to 10.6.3 – more confirmation needed) do not display this issue. I can confirm that this never occurred in Snow Leopard until Lion was released and I upgraded to it.


My request for help and information:


  • If you are running this GPU (GeForce GT 130) and OS X Lion, please contribute to this thread offering any solutions you may have or, at the very least, listing your hardware and GPU profile.
  • If you can, post crash logs so that we can compare common issues (NVDA Resman seems to be a huge recurring kext in the crash logs, for instance).
  • Post screen shots or pictures taken of the pixellation (colored pixels) and mosaic (squares drawn in the wrong place) phenomenon, so we can build a body of evidence regarding this issue. I will continue to update this thread with the same.


I feel Apple has ignored these issues for far too long, and required too many people to simply purchase new computers and new GPUs. If we can build a solid body of evidence regarding this specific issue, it will be a thread that Apple Support can be referred to.

iMac, Mac OS X (10.7.3), 3.06 Ghz (Early 2009 – iMac9,1)

Posted on May 9, 2012 8:15 AM

Reply
468 replies

Sep 5, 2012 11:06 AM in response to Ramona Adams

I received my MacBook from Apple today. I am running Mac OS 10.8.1 currently patched and it was crashing on this exact problem. They replaced my Logic Board which includes a new NVIDIA driver, so hopefully this will work.


I have tried to reproduce the problem and it's been a few hours, i'll report back here IF i get a crash with that same traceback. If I don't report back here, then the problem was fixed (or I was hit by an asteriod).


🙂


Brian

Sep 7, 2012 9:00 AM in response to brianhlarose

3 days with no crashes. I consider this Kernel Panic to be a HW problem for me and it is fixed.


SO, if you are having this problem and your mac is covered under applecare -- GO TAKE IT IN TO GET A NEW LOGIC BOARD.


If it's NOT covered under applecare, the bill would be $310 -- and that's not too bad either.


Good luck everybody.


My work is done here.

Sep 10, 2012 12:31 PM in response to MacSinceMySE

Yes I believe that I am. I have had the computer for 6 days, pushing it real hard and I have experienced ZERO crashes.


So I believe Ramona that it is repaired with the new logic board.


The key is getting the Apple folks to agree that it is overheating and crashing. When it failed the tests in the store, it was clear to them and everything else just fell into place for me.


Good Luck!


Brian

Sep 10, 2012 12:42 PM in response to brianhlarose

I was excited about finally being able to use my iMac instead of my 15inch MacBook Pro. I had reformatted the drive and installed Snow Leopard and no additional software prior to taking it to the Apple store to be repaired.


After the new graphics card was installed, it seemed to be ok at the store, so I brought it home, upgraded to Lion, then to Mountain Lion. Everything was going along well. I decided to re-install all the software from the install files instead of just uploading the time machine backup just to make sure I had a clean install of everything.


The machine stayed up most of the day, then came the pixelation and eventually crash. But, since that one crash, it has stayed up. I was running skype and adium. I have not restarted either of those apps since the crash. When it crashed, I was looking at photos with Aperture and I had a virtual machine open in Parallels 8.


I still think the problem is software, but just don't know which program or files to fix. There is a thread about replaceing a kext file. I might look it up and try that if the crashes start again.


It is disheartening to think that I spend almost $200 and then it still crashes.

Sep 21, 2012 7:52 PM in response to Ramona Adams

I had this problem pop up late last year and figured i had the suspect h/w - although my symptoms didn't seem as frequent as others reported here. I did however begin using SMC fan control and it made it much better - my mac would run for days if i didn't touch the mouse, but as soon as i watched a video or did a combination of a few things, the temp would rise and generate pixelation/kernel panic.


Unrelated to all of this - or at least i thought it was unrelated - i made some networking changes. For about the last year or so, i'd been using ISCSI and connecting to a ISCSI target on my freenas server in the basement. Last week, i upgraded freenas and decided to get rid of the ISCSI instance and just use an AFP share. Afterwards, I noticed that the temperature reported by SMC fan control dropped considerably - by 5 or 10 degrees C during typical use.


Moreover, i noticed that when i was about to have the problem, the temp would climb into the 50-55 degrees C range and then i'd get the pixelation/kernel panic symptoms - sometimes simply just browsing or sometimes while watching a video through XBMC.


Since removing the ISCSI connection, i've been kernel panic free - going on 10 days.


So seems like there's a combination of things at work here - networking s/w possibly keeping something running and rasing temperatures and then some heat related issue with the graphics card...

Oct 5, 2012 6:38 AM in response to David Portela

Hi, I have a iMac 9,1 with Geforce 130 and 8 GB ram. I'd not noticed any problems until upgrading to Mountain Lion. Then if Safari had more than 5 tabs and I was scrolling through a PDF in the browser the screen would start flickering/flashing and I’d get all sorts of crazy graphics. The mouse could be moved around but nothing could be selected until eventually i'd get a Panic Kernel or would have to reboot. BTW. If I used Chrome I couldn't get the same failure. But more and more it was happening with rime or reason.


Apple have been investigating but found nothing. I took it to the Genius bar for overnight tests, but no hardware faults were found. Apple have said it's probably a Logic or GPU fault, but as it's just out of AppleCare, replacing either will be expensive.


I've tried going back to Leopard and Snow Leopard, but still get the same problems but less so with Leopard. So whatever Mountain Lion did (overheat the GPU or something) it's permanent :-(

Anyway on reading the suggestions in this post, I decided to load Lion and run it permanently in 32bit mode, SMC fan control (ODD 2266, HDD2600 and CPU2200 rpm). Haven’t installed Flash (yet). And I’m not using Safari. I’m using Chrome which i just discovered is a 32bit App. I'm also running Win7 in Parallels 8.

Two days on and no problems! Fingers crossed, touch wood it will continue.


Thanks for the suggestions :-)


It’s just a shame that Apple aren’t stepping up with a solution.

Oct 12, 2012 5:20 AM in response to David Portela

Thanks for creating and maintaining this very specific thread. Just to add my experiences:


Imac 9,1 / 3.06Ghz / 4GB RAM / Nvidia Geforce GT 130 512MB


Happily running Snow Leopard for years (prob OSX10.6.8), but deciding to do a spring clean updated to Mountain Lion, from that point on experiencing


Constant Pixelation (groups of brightly coloured pixels, that are repeated like stamps across parts of the screen). Mouse pointer, moving windows and other sprites move in front of pixels. If scrolling down a webpage find that these pixels smear down the screen as if they are being repeated and stored in memory. Occurs immediately, prior to booting of OSX and from cold. Pixels visible in screenshots.


Occassional screen lockups where squares fo the screen seem to get jumbled up and the computer becomes uncontrollable (assume to be what OP refers to as mosaics)


Pixellation:

User uploaded file


User uploaded file


When initially installed Mountain Lion, felt running a little hot but though due to Indexing. Within few days odd graphic problems occurred with above pixellation and every now and again the screen mosaic/lockups. (wife: It’s being doing that quite a lot over the last few days, grrr!).


Following advice from this board installed smcFanControl, found might have helped with lockups but pixellation omnipresent.


Downgraded to Lion = problem still there. In fact stray pixels visible in when booted to installtion DVD (so not based within OS?)


Downgraded to Leopard (10.5) = pixellation still there, but arrangement of pixels seems to be different and less of them but still with smearing etc. Found a driver online (can't find it now but assume was from Nvidia site, probably CUDA) and found that after a restart still have pixels from and prior to boot but smearing did not occur on pages.



Upgraded back to Snow Leopard (10.6), then updated to 10.6.8 = pixellatyion still there and in shapes reminisent to Lion/ML, with smearing. Installed CUDA driver from Nvidia support site (http://www.nvidia.co.uk/Download/index.aspx?lang=en-uk) and the actual one http://www.nvidia.co.uk/object/quadro-macosx-256.02.25f01-driver-uk.html , also had in advance install the CUDA 4.x driver for Mac linked to on that page. The driver intended for GT120, but through Show Package Contents able to install drivers. I notice that there are versions for 10.7 and 10.8 and I might try those too. But bottom line didn't really do anything to help!


So still got problem. I use computer for video editing so worried about reoccuring lockups. Can live with pixellation if needed although a bit of a pain. Can't really afford anything else (any updates from anyone on cost of repair through Apple/repairers?)


****** that £££ computer only going to last three years, and that fault seems to have been caused by upgrade to OS, and that fault now persistant.


Techtool Pro revealed no problems with VRAM. Booted into Safe mode in OSX and pixellation dissappeared so assume problem with GPU and CPU.


Still going to try 32/64 bit options, playing multiple flash instances, look for firmware from 10.6 (think Lion pushed this), PRAM/SRC reset



Will

Oct 12, 2012 6:42 PM in response to Will Moindrot

Welcome (unfortunately) to our collective nightmare. My iMac still freezes daily, sometimes with pixellation, other times with the mosaic squares, other times just plain freezing out of the blue.


My current theory is that the upgrade to a new kext at a certain point pushed the GT 130 past its limits and broke it...since reverting to previous systems/kexts often doesn't seem to do any good as far as solving the problem.


I'm probably going to have to pony up some cash to replace the video card...but it is my main work machine, and that means downtime, so I have to plan it wisely.


Anyway, I'm sorry to hear you're having the same issues. It really ***** that Apple continues to ignore this/us.

Oct 16, 2012 8:58 AM in response to David Portela

Thanks for this David, I have done some testing on my machine (now rolled back to SN 10.6.8), and apart from the skidmarks as detailed in the screenshots above I haven't got it to crash even when playing 10+ Youtube vids in seperate Safari windows, or playing 6+ HDV videos in QT, or running FCP. So for me I assume that despite the annoyance of those stray pixels the damage to my video card has been only minimal. It does absolutely make me paranoid about upgrading any OS to the latest on my Mac (not so much a problem with desktop PCs in which easy to swap out to any cheap hardware replacement). Thanks again, Will

Nov 21, 2012 3:57 PM in response to Will Moindrot

Same issue here, strange mosaic kind of screen/gpu/openGL kind of errors


iMac specs:

24-inch, Early 2009, 3.06 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo

8 GB 1067 MHz DDR3

NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 512 MB

Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5


Some last log lines of the Console:


*** Canceling drag because exception 'NSInternalInconsistencyException' (reason 'Can not nest column dragging sessions') was raised during a dragging session

NVDA(OpenGL): Channel exception! exception type = 0xd = GR: SW Notify Error

IOVendorGLContext::ReportGPURestart

And a lot of these errors:

NVDA(OpenGL): Channel exception! exception type = 0xd = GR: SW Notify Error


[1196:-1332187136:1121/155336:ERROR:gpu_watchdog_thread.cc(201)] The GPU process hung. Terminating after 10000 ms.


And a lot of these errors:

NVDA(OpenGL): Channel exception! exception type = 0xd = GR: SW Notify Error


then:

[QL] QuickLookUIHelper is stuck - force quit now

NVDA(OpenGL): Channel timeout!



Force Reboot


(now switched of openGL in Photoshop, lets see what happens)

NVIDIA GeForce GT 130 Kernel Panics/Freezes in Lion & late Snow Leopard

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