- 20% cpu time disappearing
- Posted by Rene De La Etc. on October 2nd, 2005
Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating 20% cpu
time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing approximatly every
second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have tried
killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no help.
Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to date.
Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with Norton
WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
- Posted by R. McCarty on October 2nd, 2005
What startup message ? - Hardware used (Sound/Video) ?
On-board or as stand alone peripheral cards, if PCI - which
slots are they installed into. What recent event coincides with
the problem beginning ? (Driver or Program update). Is your
XP instance updated with the latest appropriate Chipset driver
package.
Aside from the litany of info requests, I would get Process
Explorer from SysInternals and let it log for say 1-2 minutes &
then review the process flow.
"Rene De La Etc." <Rene De La Etc.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:70F6DE3B-6C1B-4746-A6AC-771C2A7B9650@microsoft.com...
> Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating 20%
> cpu
> time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing approximatly
> every
> second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have tried
> killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no help.
> Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to date.
> Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with Norton
> WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
- Posted by George Hester on October 2nd, 2005
Yikes WinDoctor. Get rid of that and you won't have issues. Unfortunately
you cannot uninstall it although it appears to. It is very easy showing the
uninstall does not work but I think it is more important to get you fixed.
Reinstall the operating system from a complete wiped drive. Then make sure
you keep anything Norton out. Your issues will cease and will not reappear.
--
George Hester
_________________________________
"Rene De La Etc." <Rene De La Etc.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
message news:70F6DE3B-6C1B-4746-A6AC-771C2A7B9650@microsoft.com...
> Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating 20%
cpu
> time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing approximatly
every
> second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have tried
> killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no help.
> Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to date.
> Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with Norton
> WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
- Posted by Rene De La Etc. on October 3rd, 2005
I was referring to the sound clip that plays for the "Start Windows" event.
The hardware is all on-board. The only recent activity that might have
involved a software change is the trial of Spam Bully. The problem occurs in
both Diagnostic Startup and Normal Startup modes (msconfig). I use disk
trays. When I boot with a drive with a corrupted directory and get the
"Checking File System..." message and I bypass the check the system then
boots without the problem being activated. There was one other instance
where it booted without the problem but I was unable to tell exactly what I
did to cause that to happen. I will try using Process Explorer as soon at
time permits.
"R. McCarty" wrote:
> What startup message ? - Hardware used (Sound/Video) ?
> On-board or as stand alone peripheral cards, if PCI - which
> slots are they installed into. What recent event coincides with
> the problem beginning ? (Driver or Program update). Is your
> XP instance updated with the latest appropriate Chipset driver
> package.
> Aside from the litany of info requests, I would get Process
> Explorer from SysInternals and let it log for say 1-2 minutes &
> then review the process flow.
>
> "Rene De La Etc." <Rene De La Etc.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> message news:70F6DE3B-6C1B-4746-A6AC-771C2A7B9650@microsoft.com...
> > Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating 20%
> > cpu
> > time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing approximatly
> > every
> > second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have tried
> > killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no help.
> > Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to date.
> > Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with Norton
> > WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
>
>
>
- Posted by Rene De La Etc. on October 5th, 2005
Thank you! Process Explorer revealed that the problem was with a device
driver. Temporarily disabling the devices revealed that the problem is with
a CD-RW. Reinstalling the drivers for the drive did not resolve the problem
so it is most likely a hardware problem. That will be simple enough to
resolve. Thanks again.
"R. McCarty" wrote:
> What startup message ? - Hardware used (Sound/Video) ?
> On-board or as stand alone peripheral cards, if PCI - which
> slots are they installed into. What recent event coincides with
> the problem beginning ? (Driver or Program update). Is your
> XP instance updated with the latest appropriate Chipset driver
> package.
> Aside from the litany of info requests, I would get Process
> Explorer from SysInternals and let it log for say 1-2 minutes &
> then review the process flow.
>
> "Rene De La Etc." <Rene De La Etc.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> message news:70F6DE3B-6C1B-4746-A6AC-771C2A7B9650@microsoft.com...
> > Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating 20%
> > cpu
> > time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing approximatly
> > every
> > second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have tried
> > killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no help.
> > Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to date.
> > Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with Norton
> > WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
>
>
>
- Posted by George Hester on October 5th, 2005
CD-RW use the regular ASPI driver for CD-ROMs. That is not your issue. The
Writing software may be but you should only experience an issue when you are
writing CD-ROMs in that case. I am telling you it is WinDoctor I would put
money on it.
--
George Hester
_________________________________
"Rene De La Etc." <ReneDeLaEtc@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:12A8E330-59E2-4216-A363-35C22FF53AD6@microsoft.com...
> Thank you! Process Explorer revealed that the problem was with a device
> driver. Temporarily disabling the devices revealed that the problem is
with
> a CD-RW. Reinstalling the drivers for the drive did not resolve the
problem
> so it is most likely a hardware problem. That will be simple enough to
> resolve. Thanks again.
>
> "R. McCarty" wrote:
>
> > What startup message ? - Hardware used (Sound/Video) ?
> > On-board or as stand alone peripheral cards, if PCI - which
> > slots are they installed into. What recent event coincides with
> > the problem beginning ? (Driver or Program update). Is your
> > XP instance updated with the latest appropriate Chipset driver
> > package.
> > Aside from the litany of info requests, I would get Process
> > Explorer from SysInternals and let it log for say 1-2 minutes &
> > then review the process flow.
> >
> > "Rene De La Etc." <Rene De La Etc.@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in
> > message news:70F6DE3B-6C1B-4746-A6AC-771C2A7B9650@microsoft.com...
> > > Recently my XP Home system has had what I believe to be an rpc eating
20%
> > > cpu
> > > time (perfmon) and interrupting audio and video processing
approximatly
> > > every
> > > second. Sound problem starts with Windows startup message. Have
tried
> > > killing all applications and processes that are not critical but no
help.
> > > Regularly use Ad Aware and XoftSpy. McAfee Virus protection up to
date.
> > > Hardware firewall and Windows firewall. Registry maintained with
Norton
> > > WinDoctor. All suggestions will be appreciated.
> >
> >
> >