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#1
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Too Much Memory
I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that t
urning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
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#2
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Too Much Memory
Michael
How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#3
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Too Much Memory
I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard.
There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging fi le size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above wi ll tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and d eselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#4
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Too Much Memory
Michael,
The Performance Monitor (perfmon) can show you how much memory is actually being used per process. There are various memory counters: virtual (total amount of memory used by the process), private (virtual bytes used solely by the process) and working set (actual bytes committed to physical memory). The latter is also what you see in the Task Manager on the "Mem Usage" column. And speaking of the Task Manager, if you have a multi-CPU machine (or HT), open the processes tab on TM, right-click a process and select: "Set Affinity...". This will allow you to select which what CPU(s) should be used to schedule threads for the proces s. Good luck! Ofer "Michael Soland" wrote: I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#5
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Too Much Memory
Michael,
The Performance Monitor (perfmon) can show you how much memory is actually being used per process. There are various memory counters: virtual (total amount of memory used by the process), private (virtual bytes used solely by the process) and working set (actual bytes committed to physical memory). The latter is also what you see in the Task Manager on the "Mem Usage" column. And speaking of the Task Manager, if you have a multi-CPU machine (or HT), open the processes tab on TM, right-click a process and select: "Set Affinity...". This will allow you to select which what CPU(s) should be used to schedule threads for the proces s. Good luck! Ofer "Michael Soland" wrote: I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#6
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Too Much Memory
Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow.
For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#7
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Too Much Memory
Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow.
For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#8
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Too Much Memory
I’m not a perfectionist. I just had the money to create a really nice system, so that’s what I did. I’m not experiencing any performance problems. My programs run great, but I’m sure they could run a little faster and that’s what I’ve been look
ing for. I'll just let the system handle the size of the pagefile. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow. For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#9
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Too Much Memory
I’m not a perfectionist. I just had the money to create a really nice system, so that’s what I did. I’m not experiencing any performance problems. My programs run great, but I’m sure they could run a little faster and that’s what I’ve been look
ing for. I'll just let the system handle the size of the pagefile. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow. For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#10
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Too Much Memory
You say you're sure your programs can run faster. How do you know that? If for
example the latency of memory is 6 nano seconds how can you speed it up? What indications do you have that the programs can run faster? "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I’m not a perfectionist. I just had the money to create a really nice system, so that’s what I did. I’m not experiencing any performance problems. My programs run great, but I’m sure they could run a little faster and that’s what I’ve been looking for. I'll just let the system handle the size of the pagefile. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow. For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#11
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Too Much Memory
Yes, you are correct about memory speeds, but if some of that memory is dumped to the disk to free up memory (which is an unnecessary operation for my system), time is wasted dumping that memory to disk and fetching it again at a later time. If there is a
program which "assumes" that it is running on a system with low memory, it might dump some data to disk that it doesn't need to. Disk operations are slow and if you have the memory, you should put all the data you need in memory. Therefore you can expect a performance increase by making the most of your memory. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: You say you're sure your programs can run faster. How do you know that? If for example the latency of memory is 6 nano seconds how can you speed it up? What indications do you have that the programs can run faster? "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I’m not a perfectionist. I just had the money to create a really nice system, so that’s what I did. I’m not experiencing any performance problems. My programs run great, but I’m sure they could run a little faster and that’s what I’ve been looking for. I'll just let the system handle the size of the pagefile. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow. For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#12
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Too Much Memory
Michael
You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#13
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Too Much Memory
Increasing the amount of RAM for a start may be one way but unless you
answer questions we cannot determine whether that is the right way to proceed. Use the SINGLE utility suggested to determine what is the size of the swap file. There is also a probable issue of misreporting on your machine but until we get the correct figures it is difficult to determine what is going on! There are three ways to get a performance boost. Increase the capacity of the hardware. Cut out unnecessary programmes running in the background and regular houeskeeping. My standard text follows. Poor system performance can be the result of a single problem or a combination of factors. Listed below are issues, which you may wish to examine if you are experiencing poor performance after the boot process has completed. Some items may help with slow starting of Windows XP but the list has not been prepared for tackling that problem. Work through the list until you achieve an acceptable result. Regular and effective housekeeping is essential. What you do and how often you do it will depend on how you use your computer. A suggested routine may include: 1. In Outlook Express empty your Deleted Items folder. 2. In Outlook Express run File, Folder, Compact All whilst OFFLINE. 3. Run Disk Cleanup. Start, Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk Cleanup with Temporary Internet Files, Offline Web Pages (optional), System Restore ( more Options tab ) and Recycle Bin selected for deletion. If you have more than one drive / partition you may need to do this operation for each drive / partition. 4. Remove Cookies. Start, Control Panel, Internet Options, General, Delete Cookies. 5. Run Disk Defragmenter. Check whether you could reduce the number of days the History of sites visited is retained. Start, Control Panel, Internet Options, General, History. Spyware causes many problems. If not installed download Adaware and / or update Reference file from http://www.lavasoftusa.com/support/download/ and use it to remove parasites. If Spyware persists as a problem try a Hosts file. http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/what_is_hosts.html Slow performance resulting from insufficient memory, causing over reliance on virtual memory, may be especially noticed by those upgrading to Windows XP from an earlier version of Windows. Windows XP will run with 64 MB of RAM memory. However, a minimum of 256 MB is recommended and many users will recommend 512 MB. You may check on pagefile (virtual memory) usage with Page File Monitor for XP: http://www.dougknox.com/ Check how much free space you have on the hard drive / partition where your pagefile is located. You need a minimum of 15% but 20% or more is better. Check your setting for the Indexing Service. Start, Administrative Tools, Services, Indexing Service. The default setting is Manual. Check that it is not running. More information he http://www.blackviper.com/WinXP/serv...dexing_Service You can have too many programmes running in the background. Close programmes/windows after use. Check whether all the programmes loading when Windows is started are really necessary. http://aumha.org/a/loads.htm Check whether you can identify slow performance with a particular programme. Look in Google to see whether others have encountered the same problem and found a solution. http://groups.google.com/ Are there any error messages in Event Viewer? You can access Event Viewer by selecting Start, Administrative Tools, and Event Viewer. When researching the meaning of the error, information regarding Event ID: and Source Description is important. HOW TO: View and Manage Event Logs in Event Viewer in Windows XP http://support.microsoft.com/default...&Product=winxp ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#14
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Too Much Memory
Alright, I have 4.0 GB of physical memory (RAM). I bought it. I installed it. I've got dual Xeon 2.8 GHz chips with hyper-threading. With all my hard disks, I have approximately 250 GB of disk space (spanned across 5 volumes, no RAID, 3 SCSI-160 and 2 ID
E). Each disk only has 1 partition (except the one with Linux on it). Each disk has anywhere from 50%-15% free space. I do not have writing to NTFS enabled within Linux (Windows is the only OS that touches the NTFS disks). I'm very good about taking care of the standard performance drainers. I don't keep a history of anything (documents, websites, web-cache...) Recycle bin isn't used, everything just gets immediately deleted. Defragmentation occurs at regular intervals. I m not looking for general tips, I’m looking for something that prohibits programs from using virtual memory. I’ve got the memory, so why not use it!? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Increasing the amount of RAM for a start may be one way but unless you answer questions we cannot determine whether that is the right way to proceed. Use the SINGLE utility suggested to determine what is the size of the swap file. There is also a probable issue of misreporting on your machine but until we get the correct figures it is difficult to determine what is going on! There are three ways to get a performance boost. Increase the capacity of the hardware. Cut out unnecessary programmes running in the background and regular houeskeeping. My standard text follows. Poor system performance can be the result of a single problem or a combination of factors. Listed below are issues, which you may wish to examine if you are experiencing poor performance after the boot process has completed. Some items may help with slow starting of Windows XP but the list has not been prepared for tackling that problem. Work through the list until you achieve an acceptable result. Regular and effective housekeeping is essential. What you do and how often you do it will depend on how you use your computer. A suggested routine may include: 1. In Outlook Express empty your Deleted Items folder. 2. In Outlook Express run File, Folder, Compact All whilst OFFLINE. 3. Run Disk Cleanup. Start, Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk Cleanup with Temporary Internet Files, Offline Web Pages (optional), System Restore ( more Options tab ) and Recycle Bin selected for deletion. If you have more than one drive / partition you may need to do this operation for each drive / partition. 4. Remove Cookies. Start, Control Panel, Internet Options, General, Delete Cookies. 5. Run Disk Defragmenter. Check whether you could reduce the number of days the History of sites visited is retained. Start, Control Panel, Internet Options, General, History. Spyware causes many problems. If not installed download Adaware and / or update Reference file from http://www.lavasoftusa.com/support/download/ and use it to remove parasites. If Spyware persists as a problem try a Hosts file. http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/what_is_hosts.html Slow performance resulting from insufficient memory, causing over reliance on virtual memory, may be especially noticed by those upgrading to Windows XP from an earlier version of Windows. Windows XP will run with 64 MB of RAM memory. However, a minimum of 256 MB is recommended and many users will recommend 512 MB. You may check on pagefile (virtual memory) usage with Page File Monitor for XP: http://www.dougknox.com/ Check how much free space you have on the hard drive / partition where your pagefile is located. You need a minimum of 15% but 20% or more is better. Check your setting for the Indexing Service. Start, Administrative Tools, Services, Indexing Service. The default setting is Manual. Check that it is not running. More information he http://www.blackviper.com/WinXP/serv...dexing_Service You can have too many programmes running in the background. Close programmes/windows after use. Check whether all the programmes loading when Windows is started are really necessary. http://aumha.org/a/loads.htm Check whether you can identify slow performance with a particular programme. Look in Google to see whether others have encountered the same problem and found a solution. http://groups.google.com/ Are there any error messages in Event Viewer? You can access Event Viewer by selecting Start, Administrative Tools, and Event Viewer. When researching the meaning of the error, information regarding Event ID: and Source Description is important. HOW TO: View and Manage Event Logs in Event Viewer in Windows XP http://support.microsoft.com/default...&Product=winxp ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
#15
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Too Much Memory
I’m not a perfectionist. I just had the money to create a really nice system, so that’s what I did. I’m not experiencing any performance problems. My programs run great, but I’m sure they could run a little faster and that’s what I’ve been look
ing for. I'll just let the system handle the size of the pagefile. -Michael "Unknown" wrote: Are you merely trying to be a perfectionist or is your system running slow. For the amount of memory you have your page file is much too small even tho it probably isn't being used.. "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... Hi Gerry, Thanks for recommending some utilities, however, I would prefer and answer to my question: “is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory?” [First post of this thread]. My pagefile.sys file stays at 102,400KB. I could go lower, but I don’t want to decrease performance if or when the pagefile needs to increase in size. Running all sorts of programs and crunching data does not increase the size of the pagefile. I’m just looking for a way to get a performance boost. Virtual memory slows everything down because of the inherent abstraction and IO to a slower medium. -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael You are misinterpreting what you are seeing! Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties. The amount of RAM memory is stated on the General tab. It is unlikely that you have 4,096 mb or 3,506 mb for that matter! "This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using." No it is the amount of disk space set aside for virtual memory. Whether it is being used is another matter. The size of pagefile.sys is not an indicator of virtual memory being used. Allocations of virtual memory are made to applications for their use as and when they need it. That does not mean they are using it ( you make this point yourself ). Read more in the link below: http://aumha.org/win5/a/xpvm.htm The Article above contains a link to a small Pagefile utility created by Bill James, which measures the pagefile in use: http://billsway.com/notes%5Fpublic/WinXP%5FTweaks/ Page file in use is the key factor. If you are using too much virtual memory you may benefit from adding RAM memory. However, we need to know how much virtual memory you are using and how much RAM you have? How old is your computer? Was the machine bought with Windows XP installed or did it come with an earlier version of Windows installed? Done you have more than one hard drive? Are any drives partitioned? ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have 4096 MB of physical memory. My BIOS reports that I have 3506 MB of memory. This is a known issue with my motherboard. There is an easy way to view the amount of virtual memory currently used by the system. Go to Control Panel-System-Advanced-Performance, Settings-Advanced-Virtual Memory, Changed. The bottom part of the window that pops up will say “Total paging file size for all drives.” This is the amount of virtual memory that windows reports it is using. If you want to check this information out yourself, all that you need to do is find a little file called “pagefile.sys.” This file can live in the root directory of any hard drive connected to your system. The Virtual Memory screen described above will tell you which drive it is on. If that’ s confusing, it is probably at C:\pagefile.sys. To view the file, go to My Computer-Tools-Folder Options-View. Now select “Display contents of system folders” and “Show hidden files and folders” and deselect “Hide protected operating system files.” This will allow you to see pagefile.sys. Check its size and poof, you know how much virtual memory your system has allocated (it is another question altogether if it is using it). Can somebody answer my original questions please? -Michael "Gerry Cornell" wrote: Michael How much RAM memory? How do you know how much virtual memory is being used? There is no utility in Windows XP which gives you virtual memory usage! You need a third party utility to get that information! ~~~~~~ Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ FCA Stourport, Worcs, England Enquire, plan and execute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Please tell the newsgroup how any suggested solution worked for you. http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Michael Soland" wrote in message ... I have a beast of a system running Windows XP Pro, when it should probably be running Server 2003. I have a problem with too much memory and not enough programs to run. The Task Manager reports that my system cruises at 304 MB of memory used. I know that turning off Virtual Memory is a bad thing, but is there a gentle way of coaxing programs to stay resident in memory? I'd also like to know if there is a way to associate a certain program to run on a particular processor (in a multi-processor machine) each time the program is invoked. |
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