Boot guard verified DXE that is failed
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0
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I'm new to building computer,
I've just built my new PC:
- MSI Z97i ac gaming Mini ITX board
- i7 4790K intel processor
- 650W PSU
- Leadtek Geforce GTX 970
- Vengeance 16GB ram
- 128 GB SSD
I've just placed all this parts together and started it up.
It shows "Boot guard verified DXE that is failed"
No matter how many times I've restarted it, it keeps showing this.
Did I accidentally broken the MotherBoard? Or could it be because I didn't install the drivers?
I don't have an optical drive to install the drivers for now.
motherboard uefi firmware
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up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm new to building computer,
I've just built my new PC:
- MSI Z97i ac gaming Mini ITX board
- i7 4790K intel processor
- 650W PSU
- Leadtek Geforce GTX 970
- Vengeance 16GB ram
- 128 GB SSD
I've just placed all this parts together and started it up.
It shows "Boot guard verified DXE that is failed"
No matter how many times I've restarted it, it keeps showing this.
Did I accidentally broken the MotherBoard? Or could it be because I didn't install the drivers?
I don't have an optical drive to install the drivers for now.
motherboard uefi firmware
You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
I'm new to building computer,
I've just built my new PC:
- MSI Z97i ac gaming Mini ITX board
- i7 4790K intel processor
- 650W PSU
- Leadtek Geforce GTX 970
- Vengeance 16GB ram
- 128 GB SSD
I've just placed all this parts together and started it up.
It shows "Boot guard verified DXE that is failed"
No matter how many times I've restarted it, it keeps showing this.
Did I accidentally broken the MotherBoard? Or could it be because I didn't install the drivers?
I don't have an optical drive to install the drivers for now.
motherboard uefi firmware
I'm new to building computer,
I've just built my new PC:
- MSI Z97i ac gaming Mini ITX board
- i7 4790K intel processor
- 650W PSU
- Leadtek Geforce GTX 970
- Vengeance 16GB ram
- 128 GB SSD
I've just placed all this parts together and started it up.
It shows "Boot guard verified DXE that is failed"
No matter how many times I've restarted it, it keeps showing this.
Did I accidentally broken the MotherBoard? Or could it be because I didn't install the drivers?
I don't have an optical drive to install the drivers for now.
motherboard uefi firmware
motherboard uefi firmware
edited Jun 16 at 17:25
bwDraco
36.5k36135177
36.5k36135177
asked Feb 5 '15 at 16:06
Joshua Tan
814
814
You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42
add a comment |
You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42
You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
according to many this is a Bios issue. Basically your motherboard has 2 bios and during an update, only 1 was updated and not the other. you may have to flash both to make sure both are running the same version.
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Well, the motherboard needs to be replaced. I had to do that unfortunately.
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
according to many this is a Bios issue. Basically your motherboard has 2 bios and during an update, only 1 was updated and not the other. you may have to flash both to make sure both are running the same version.
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
according to many this is a Bios issue. Basically your motherboard has 2 bios and during an update, only 1 was updated and not the other. you may have to flash both to make sure both are running the same version.
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
according to many this is a Bios issue. Basically your motherboard has 2 bios and during an update, only 1 was updated and not the other. you may have to flash both to make sure both are running the same version.
according to many this is a Bios issue. Basically your motherboard has 2 bios and during an update, only 1 was updated and not the other. you may have to flash both to make sure both are running the same version.
answered Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
Anrothan
11
11
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
add a comment |
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
Also would like to add that contacting MSI would help clarify my answer.
– Anrothan
Sep 3 '15 at 20:03
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
DXE is " Driver Execution Environment" which is indeed part of the EFI framework and may be considered part of the BIOS, so without further information (which may not be possible) I think this is pretty close to the answer. If it was just purchased or is under warranty returning it may be the better option over flashing.
– Yorik
Sep 3 '15 at 20:24
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Well, the motherboard needs to be replaced. I had to do that unfortunately.
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
Well, the motherboard needs to be replaced. I had to do that unfortunately.
add a comment |
up vote
-1
down vote
up vote
-1
down vote
Well, the motherboard needs to be replaced. I had to do that unfortunately.
Well, the motherboard needs to be replaced. I had to do that unfortunately.
answered Nov 1 '17 at 18:09
Swaggy
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
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You can install drivers from a USB device. You do have one of those right? But this problem isn't a driver issue. You need to RMA your motherboard its defective. You can also flash the same version of UEFI twice after switching which one will be used. Check your manual on how to switch between the primary and backup UEFI.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:10
Your hardware provided MSI isn't just linked all its hardware to the same UEFI page does indeed have the "Multi-BIOS II" feature. The manual for your board will explain how you can switch between the two. The suggestion of flashing an update is a last ditch effort. You might just want to RMA it.
– Ramhound
Feb 5 '15 at 16:42