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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task
manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Never be haughty to the humble; never be humble to the haughty. -Jefferson Davis, confederate president (1808-1889) |
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#2
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
On 11/12/2013 5:49 PM, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) Explorer.exe does a lot of things. As a shell which you are probably using controls the whole desktop. Explorer as a file manager just does that. But Explorer also links to IE and other file tasks as well. So I would ask if there are other things opened? Like the Explorer in file manager mode or IE? -- Bill Gateway M465e ('06 era) - Thunderbird v12 Centrino Core2 Duo T7400 2.16 GHz - 4GB - Windows 8 Pro w/Media Center |
#3
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer If the file explorer is railed at 100%, that should have an effect on your system. Especially if it is a single core. If it's multi-core, then one core is railed, and the other cores remain idle. Normal Priority, means it will fight for cycles with other Normal Priority tasks. Which is most of them. If the thing is assigned a below normal priority, then other things get to execute ahead of it in a sense. And there is less system impact. You can do properties in Task Manager, and see what the priority is set to. While the PID number is not absolute in any sense, it would be normal for those to have started early after the system booted. PID numbers roll over and get re-used, so for a system with a long uptime, you can't say anything definitive about say Firefox PID. But if you've "never lost the desktop", then chances are the same Explorer is still running as was there when the system booted. ******* Maybe it could be computing thumbnails for movies ? Do you have a movie folder in which thumbnails are being generated ? I think I did that as an experiment once, and I think even when the movie folder was closed, the damn thing was just cranking away. I expect you'll find more than a few hits for these symptoms in Google (100% Explorer CPU). It's a common problem, with malware as a root cause in some cases. You could also use Process Monitor, and see what general activities are going on. Lots of Registry accesses ? That's normal. Lots of file accesses ? That may not be normal, depending on whether there is an AV at work, the indexer is running, and so on. (Process Monitor 3.05) http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...rnals/bb896645 I just traced on that process name (Explorer.EXE) and it was pretty quiet at the beginning of my trace. But as soon as I made some adjustment on my system, the Procmon log started to fill up. Have a look and see what's up. HTH, Paul |
#4
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
In message , BillW50
writes: On 11/12/2013 5:49 PM, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) Explorer.exe does a lot of things. As a shell which you are probably using controls the whole desktop. Explorer as a file manager just does that. But Explorer also links to IE and other file tasks as well. So I would ask if there are other things opened? Like the Explorer in file manager mode or IE? It's only happened in the last few days, and is now the case from startup: I used to get low (8, 17, that sort of percentage) CPU usage at "idle", i. e. after all had settled down. And I hardly ever use IE - Firefox is my browser of choice (recent versions of which _have_ tended to suddenly start eating CPU, but that's not running at this moment). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf "Eastenders" is like being punched repeatedly in the face for half an hour. - Stephen Mangan, in Radio Times 5-11 May 2012 |
#5
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote:
As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) 100% idle ? |
#6
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
In message
, jim writes: "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) 100% idle ? No, the System Idle Process (which normally gets 50-80% of the CPU) is right at the bottom now. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf - often six furlongs ahead of the field, but on the wrong racecourse. - Colin Dexter on (his creation the character) Morse; Radio Times 12-18 May 2012. |
#7
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
In message , Paul
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: As of somewhere in the last few days, explorer.exe _seems_ (in task manager) to be using 100%, most of the time, of my CPU. But the machine isn't sluggish: YouTube is no more jerky than usual, a locally-played video plays as smoothly as ever ... I've scanned; I've checked my HD's SMART; my wifi MoDem isn't showing excessive activity, so I've not been recruited into a botnet; in fact, if it wasn't for task manager _saying_ the CPU was at 100% most of the time, I'd not know anything was amiss - except that an explorer window I have open seems to jump to have the focus on My Documents, occasionally. Any ideas? I've only been looking at Task Manager to keep an eye on what Firefox is up to, as that _was_ getting sluggish after being used for a bit. (Oddly, even that - Firefox - doesn't seem to be unusuable.) When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) If the file explorer is railed at 100%, that should have an effect on your system. Especially if it is a single core. If it's multi-core, then one core is railed, and the other cores remain idle. It is having _some_ effect, but not making everything sluggish, which is what I'd have expected. Normal Priority, means it will fight for cycles with other Normal Priority tasks. Which is most of them. If the thing is assigned a below normal priority, then other things get to execute ahead of it in a sense. And there is less system impact. You can do properties in Task Manager, and see what the priority is set to. While the PID number is not absolute in any sense, it would be normal for those to have started early after the system booted. PID numbers roll over and get re-used, so for a system with a long uptime, you can't say anything definitive about say Firefox PID. But if you've "never lost the desktop", then chances Not so far. are the same Explorer is still running as was there when the system booted. ******* Maybe it could be computing thumbnails for movies ? Do you have a movie folder in which thumbnails are being generated ? I think I did that as an experiment once, and I think even when the movie folder was closed, the damn thing was just cranking away. Well, I don't have significantly more movies than before the behaviour started. (My default movie icon is the VLC cone, not a thumbnail icon, anyway.) I expect you'll find more than a few hits for these symptoms in Google (100% Explorer CPU). It's a common problem, with malware as a root cause in some cases. I still have a lot of looking to do! You could also use Process Monitor, and see what general activities are going on. Lots of Registry accesses ? That's normal. Lots of file accesses ? That may not be normal, depending on whether there is an AV at work, the indexer is running, and so on. (Process Monitor 3.05) http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...rnals/bb896645 I just traced on that process name (Explorer.EXE) and it was pretty quiet at the beginning of my trace. But as soon as I made some adjustment on my system, the Procmon log started to fill up. Have a look and see what's up. HTH, Paul I will in time (though I've looked at such logs before and not really understood them!). -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf - often six furlongs ahead of the field, but on the wrong racecourse. - Colin Dexter on (his creation the character) Morse; Radio Times 12-18 May 2012. |
#8
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , Paul writes: When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) Try View : Select Columns. I have PID, I/O Read Bytes, I/O Write Bytes selected on mine. The last two, allow me to figure out when a backup is about to finish. Paul |
#9
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
In message , Paul
writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: In message , Paul writes: When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) Try View : Select Columns. I have PID, I/O Read Bytes, I/O Write Bytes selected on mine. The last two, allow me to figure out when a backup is about to finish. Paul Thanks. I now have Firefox open - which tends to be a CPU hog of late (why I was looking at Task Manager in the first place). Total CPU is still more or less 100% all the time, but now it's mostly Firefox, with Explorer "taking up any slack" as it we in other words, Explorer, though using a lot of CPU if it can, isn't high _priority_. If I close Firefox, I think Explorer will shoot back to near 100% again. I am just more than a little curious what it's _doing_! I googled as you suggested, and by far the commonest suggestion seems to be that it's scanning big .avi files to make icons out of them. But I don't think it can be that: (a) my icon for most movie files is the VLC cone rather than an icon, (b) I've made the registry amendment most of them mention, (c) it's been going on for _days_ now, (d) it happens from bootup before I have any folders open. (And (e) I haven't downloaded any _huge_ movie files lately anyway.) Ho hum, I'll keep reading the google suggestions! It's not a _major_ problem: the main one is the side-effect that it changes focus (to "My Documents") occasionally, which is a bit of a pain as my news/email client (Turnpike) operates as a shell extension (so loses its place). Only at fairly long intervals though. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Everyone learns from science. It all depends how you use the knowledge. - "Gil Grissom" (CSI). |
#10
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
"J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote in message ...
In message , Paul writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: In message , Paul writes: When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) Try View : Select Columns. I have PID, I/O Read Bytes, I/O Write Bytes selected on mine. The last two, allow me to figure out when a backup is about to finish. Paul Thanks. I now have Firefox open - which tends to be a CPU hog of late (why I was looking at Task Manager in the first place). Total CPU is still more or less 100% all the time, but now it's mostly Firefox, with Explorer "taking up any slack" as it we in other words, Explorer, though using a lot of CPU if it can, isn't high _priority_. If I close Firefox, I think Explorer will shoot back to near 100% again. I am just more than a little curious what it's _doing_! I googled as you suggested, and by far the commonest suggestion seems to be that it's scanning big .avi files to make icons out of them. But I don't think it can be that: (a) my icon for most movie files is the VLC cone rather than an icon, (b) I've made the registry amendment most of them mention, (c) it's been going on for _days_ now, (d) it happens from bootup before I have any folders open. (And (e) I haven't downloaded any _huge_ movie files lately anyway.) Ho hum, I'll keep reading the google suggestions! It's not a _major_ problem: the main one is the side-effect that it changes focus (to "My Documents") occasionally, which is a bit of a pain as my news/email client (Turnpike) operates as a shell extension (so loses its place). Only at fairly long intervals though. -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf Everyone learns from science. It all depends how you use the knowledge. - "Gil Grissom" (CSI). |
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AC3 Filter _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
John
How manly GB is you Ram need to be 2GB or more And how Is the free space on HDD Need the be 4GB or more for you VM Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) Try View : Select Columns. I have PID, I/O Read Bytes, I/O Write Bytes selected on mine. The last two, allow me to figure out when a backup is about to finish. Paul Thanks. I now have Firefox open - which tends to be a CPU hog of late (why I was looking at Task Manager in the first place). Total CPU is still more or less 100% all the time, but now it's mostly Firefox, with Explorer "taking up any slack" as it we in other words, Explorer, though using a lot of CPU if it can, isn't high _priority_. If I close Firefox, I think Explorer will shoot back to near 100% again. That is Normal I am just more than a little curious what it's _doing_! I googled as you suggested, and by far the commonest suggestion seems to be that it's scanning big .avi files to make icons out of them. But I don't think it can be that: (a) my icon for most movie files is the VLC cone rather VLC Run all the time in the background 100% again Because it believe it need to tell Flash Apps How to be view in all web browsers and MP RP and QT That go for Media Player Classic Too Classic will not unstill from Windows For Classic and VLC runs background AC3 Filter Divx ffdshow Audio, Video, and VFW Haali XviD On2 Go to AC3 Filter and ffdshow config Put Flash setting back to Flash all WMP back to Windows Media Player all QT back to QuickTime all RP back to RealPlayer http://www.ac3filter.net/files/docs/...ilter_eng.html 5.2.6 Processor usage (CPU) This indicator shows the usage of CPU resources by the filter. LOOL than an icon, (b) I've made the registry amendment most of them mention, (c) it's been going on for _days_ now, (d) it happens from bootup before I have any folders open. (And (e) I haven't downloaded any _huge_ movie files lately anyway.) Ho hum, I'll keep reading the google suggestions! It's not a _major_ problem: the main one is the side-effect that it changes focus (to "My Documents") occasionally, which is a bit of a pain as my news/email client (Turnpike) operates as a shell extension (so loses its place). Only at fairly long intervals though. VLC is for a Google OS Have a Good Day |
#12
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explorer.exe _apparently_ using 100% CPU?
J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , Paul writes: J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote: In message , Paul writes: When I look in my Task Manager Explorer.EXE PID=380 Priority = Normal --- (File) Explorer iexplorer.exe PID=332 Priority = Normal --- Internet Explorer When I look in my Task Manager, I don't see any PIDs or priority column; I have XP Home, does that make a difference? (I don't usually have IE running.) Try View : Select Columns. I have PID, I/O Read Bytes, I/O Write Bytes selected on mine. The last two, allow me to figure out when a backup is about to finish. Paul Thanks. I now have Firefox open - which tends to be a CPU hog of late (why I was looking at Task Manager in the first place). Total CPU is still more or less 100% all the time, but now it's mostly Firefox, with Explorer "taking up any slack" as it we in other words, Explorer, though using a lot of CPU if it can, isn't high _priority_. If I close Firefox, I think Explorer will shoot back to near 100% again. I am just more than a little curious what it's _doing_! I googled as you suggested, and by far the commonest suggestion seems to be that it's scanning big .avi files to make icons out of them. But I don't think it can be that: (a) my icon for most movie files is the VLC cone rather than an icon, (b) I've made the registry amendment most of them mention, (c) it's been going on for _days_ now, (d) it happens from bootup before I have any folders open. (And (e) I haven't downloaded any _huge_ movie files lately anyway.) Ho hum, I'll keep reading the google suggestions! It's not a _major_ problem: the main one is the side-effect that it changes focus (to "My Documents") occasionally, which is a bit of a pain as my news/email client (Turnpike) operates as a shell extension (so loses its place). Only at fairly long intervals though. That's where Process Monitor program comes in. You can have it capture a minute of activity, and look at all the Firefox or Explorer file read or write activity. If Explorer is making thumbnails, you should see a sustained stream of reads to a file ending in .avi or whatever. If you thought it was malware, then Process Monitor would be a waste of time. But if you thought it was a functional failure, it might require the collection of some tell-tale data, to figure out what is broken. Paul |
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