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Back to sudden crashes, hours of lost work due to saves not actually saving, no dump files created.....


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Quite some time ago I had this issue, and it caused me to abandon CbB for nearly two years.  I returned and CbB has functioned almost flawlessly for about 6 months...until this morning when suddenly I'm dealing with the exact same issue. 

I went back and found a couple others that had the same issue way back when, but no surefire diagnosis seemed to come of it and/or their hardware/software situation was different than mine.

CbB will randomly freeze.  Sometimes when hitting play, sometimes when hitting stop, sometimes when editing a clip, sometimes when doing nothing at all.  Happens with all plugins disabled, happens with all plugins enabled.  Small projects, large projects, doesn't matter.  happens more often when Cake is open for longer periods of time, which kinda makes it seem like a memory leak but I can't find any signs of such a leak.

To add insult to injury, all of the work done in said session is lost, in spite of both auto-saving and manually saving.  It's like the project was never even touched.

And to make matters worse, no dump file is created, so I can't even have the devs take a look at it.

I'm on the latest/final CbB build.  My computer is fully updated.  Windows Defender realtime scanning is off; updates are paused (I update manually).  I don't have other AV or anything running in the background.  All my plugins are updated.  I also don't even run any of the same plugins that I ran two years ago (besides a handful of stock Sonitus plugs), as I did a full revamp of my workflow and tools a couple months ago (again, everything worked fine this go around until this morning).

Also, nothing was specifically updated this morning to change anything.  I ran /chkdsk with no errors reported.  Computer is cleaned and defragged weekly.  Cleaned picture cache and audio folders.  Etc.

System resource usage is very consistent and stable in every project, and no project of mine goes past 50% even with all plugins enabled.

I don't even know that I'm asking for a resolution at this point; just posting in case someone else has the same problem I guess.  I'm just tired, man.

Edited by AxlBrutality
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1 hour ago, AxlBrutality said:

To add insult to injury, all of the work done in said session is lost, in spite of both auto-saving and manually saving.  It's like the project was never even touched.

Undiagnosed chronic crashing is not wholly unusual; given the symptoms and other factors having been eliminated, I would tend to suspect audio driver misbehavior. But unsuccessful saves with no indication of a problem is pretty much unheard of which points to some sort of O/S or hardware/firmware level issue.

Is there anything atypical about your storage setup like disk arrays or network storage?

Have you recently changed/updated your ASIO interface and/or have another one you can try to see if stability improves?

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This doesn't fix the problem, but to see if your data is recoverable:

Did you see the files in the folder as you saved new versions of them? If so, they should still be on the drive somewhere.

If the project was always saved over the top of the old one, and the crash happened during a save process (even if this happens in the background like autosave, etc), then it might be trashed because parts of the file may not match up with others even if it's recovered. 

 

I'd guess you've already checked to be sure the files were not saved in an incorrect location by the program? 

 

If not, a search for the project file extension(s) and any audio files generated is at least worth a shot (using the advanced options to search within system folders as well, in case something really messed up where they went). 

 

There are programs out there that can locate "lost" files, and might be able to find yours, if they were indeed written to the drive at all.   Doesn't always work, but it's worth a shot if there's any chance they're there. 

 

9 hours ago, AxlBrutality said:

Computer is cleaned and defragged weekly.  Cleaned picture cache and audio folders.  Etc.

FWIW, doing these things (other than the picture cache) may ensure inability to recover "lost" files, as the defrag will move file segments around the drive, and overwrite things that might still be there but were not in the visible files (no FAT references to them). 

With modern harddisks (even the decade-plus-old ones I use) it's almost always unnecessary to defrag for performance reasons; even a fairly fragmented drive accesses data fast enough to keep up with most usages (maybe if there are enough audio tracks continuously streaming to/from the drive it might start choking).  

I'm sure it has nothing to do with the problem you're having but it might make it impossible to locate / recover lost files (or accidentally deleted ones) in the future if you ever need to do so. 

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Just a thought... Have you run a memory test on your ram? https://www.memtest86.com/

I've had this issue of random crashes and freezing before and it can be frustrating to figure it out. After running memtest86 for several hours (over night), a stick of ram would occasionally cause an error. After replacing the bad ram, the problem never came back; it's been three years now- no wierd crashes anymore. I'm not saying this is your problem but bad ram can be elusive and random in nature. It can work fine for days then intermittently cause problems. This is especially true if you overclock your system.

 Good luck!

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19 minutes ago, datadog said:

I've had this issue of random crashes and freezing before and it can be frustrating to figure it out. After running memtest86 for several hours (over night), a stick of ram would occasionally cause an error.

Good point. The one time I had realy chronic and mysterious crashing turned out to be due to bad RAM, verified by Memtest. And other apps were not affected; only SONAR was using RAM extensively enough to hit the bad blocks.

But it seems the OP has disappeared...?

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Yes, great explanation. That's why it's so hard to pinpoint when other programs work fine. That flakey cell of memory has to accessed when it's acting up by the routine in the program that called it. "Poof" is the result. Cakewalk Bandlab is a complex program that relies on sound memory.

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