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#1
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Followup on complete shut down
Several days ago it was posted that because of the way a machine shuts
down with Fastshut down enabled, it may eventually cause the machine to run slow Mine computer was running slow and I did a shut down from the command line it fixed the slow responses. http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-tu...in-windows-10/ From the Administration command prompt: shutdown /s /f /t 0 As I said it speed up the start up considerably. Thank you for the information, though I could not find the original poster -- 2018: The year we learn to play the great game of Euchre |
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#2
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Followup on complete shut down
On Thu, 8 Feb 2018 21:13:03 -0500, Keith Nuttle
wrote: Several days ago it was posted that because of the way a machine shuts down with Fastshut down enabled, it may eventually cause the machine to run slow Mine computer was running slow and I did a shut down from the command line it fixed the slow responses. http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-tu...in-windows-10/ From the Administration command prompt: shutdown /s /f /t 0 As I said it speed up the start up considerably. Thank you for the information, though I could not find the original poster What language are you using? |
#3
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Followup on complete shut down
Keith Nuttle wrote:
Several days ago it was posted that because of the way a machine shuts down with Fastshut down enabled, it may eventually cause the machine to run slow Mine computer was running slow and I did a shut down from the command line it fixed the slow responses. http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-tu...in-windows-10/ From the Administration command prompt: shutdown /s /f /t 0 As I said it speed up the start up considerably. Thank you for the information, though I could not find the original poster The poster was probably T. He likes those commands. ******* I usually kill two birds with one stone. powercfg /h off which kills hibernation, eliminates a rather large hiberfile from my SSD, and also kills Fast Start at the same time (since it is also a Hibernation Technology item). But that's just me. My desktop test machine, the only two states I use are Sleep and Run. No Hibernate. It would add too much time at shutdown, to hibernate (worst case). Hibernate doesn't have to be slow, but it will reserve a rather large file, if you have lots of RAM. Hibernate only writes out the "busy" portion of RAM, needed to reconstruct the session. "Fast Start" on the other hand, records the kernel and driver state, and does a "warm start" on the drivers, to reload the hardware registers. The only way it could be slow, is if some joker was doing a "checksum" on it. And the file is pretty small, and that's not the problem. In Windows 10, I'm seeing some behavior (in an xbootmgr trace), where one CPU core is railed for maybe 20 seconds, and there is no disk I/O to speak of (screen remains black). The only process I can see there, is SMSS in that window of time. I haven't a clue what that means. Probably that the trace isn't recording everything, at a guess :-( https://s9.postimg.org/dmso6bea7/xbootmgr_and_wpa.gif I don't think you can see the Fast Start activity in a trace. As the kernel has to be fully loaded, before any kind of "service" can be offered to any other software. The t=0 on an xbootmgr trace, would be starting after whatever delay was involved for Fast Start. Paul |
#4
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Followup on complete shut down
On 2/9/2018 1:52 AM, Lucifer Morningstar wrote:
On Thu, 8 Feb 2018 21:13:03 -0500, Keith Nuttle wrote: Several days ago it was posted that because of the way a machine shuts down with Fastshut down enabled, it may eventually cause the machine to run slow ~ Mine computer was running slow and I did a shut down from the command line it fixed the slow responses. http://www.intowindows.com/how-to-tu...in-windows-10/ From the Administration command prompt: shutdown /s /f /t 0 As I said it speed up the start up considerably. Thank you for the information, though I could not find the original poster What language are you using? English! And since I posted this to windows 10 I assume I am using Windows 10 on a PC computer. -- 2018: The year we learn to play the great game of Euchre |
#5
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Followup on complete shut down
On Fri, 9 Feb 2018 07:46:13 -0500, Keith Nuttle
wrote: And since I posted this to windows 10 I assume I am using Windows 10 on a PC computer. Is a personal computer computer anything like a personal information number number? g |
#6
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Followup on complete shut down
On Fri, 09 Feb 2018 08:24:24 -0700, Ken Blake
wrote: On Fri, 9 Feb 2018 07:46:13 -0500, Keith Nuttle wrote: And since I posted this to windows 10 I assume I am using Windows 10 on a PC computer. Is a personal computer computer anything like a personal information number number? g It's like an automated teller machine machine. |
#7
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Followup on complete shut down
On Fri, 09 Feb 2018 09:52:38 -0600, Char Jackson
wrote: On Fri, 09 Feb 2018 08:24:24 -0700, Ken Blake wrote: On Fri, 9 Feb 2018 07:46:13 -0500, Keith Nuttle wrote: And since I posted this to windows 10 I assume I am using Windows 10 on a PC computer. Is a personal computer computer anything like a personal information number number? g It's like an automated teller machine machine. Yep! |
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