- Joined
- Aug 20, 2007
- Messages
- 21,469 (3.40/day)
System Name | Pioneer |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen R9 9950X |
Motherboard | GIGABYTE Aorus Elite X670 AX |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 + A whole lotta Sunon and Corsair Maglev blower fans... |
Memory | 64GB (4x 16GB) G.Skill Flare X5 @ DDR5-6000 CL30 |
Video Card(s) | XFX RX 7900 XTX Speedster Merc 310 |
Storage | Intel 905p Optane 960GB boot, +2x Crucial P5 Plus 2TB PCIe 4.0 NVMe SSDs |
Display(s) | 55" LG 55" B9 OLED 4K Display |
Case | Thermaltake Core X31 |
Audio Device(s) | TOSLINK->Schiit Modi MB->Asgard 2 DAC Amp->AKG Pro K712 Headphones or HDMI->B9 OLED |
Power Supply | FSP Hydro Ti Pro 850W |
Mouse | Logitech G305 Lightspeed Wireless |
Keyboard | WASD Code v3 with Cherry Green keyswitches + PBT DS keycaps |
Software | Gentoo Linux x64 / Windows 11 Enterprise IoT 2024 |
Well if you are using memory integrity on 11 you'll get the hypervisor ring too, but yeah, most gamers don't do that.It'd be especially egregious considered Windows only utilizes two of the four security rings in x86 CPUs, the innermost "supervisor" and outermost "user" mode rings (rings 0 and 3). As I understand, though, even with operating under a root-level account, common applications will still be in user mode, there just wouldn't be anything to inhibit system-wide (including kernel, protected and reserved regions) access.
In the name of science, one can always try to run something with NT Authority permissions to see if that alone bypasses the problem...
View attachment 359150
It'd be worth asking if w1zzard has memory integrity setting on in these tests, I suppose.