In addition to these two items that will help you identify a process, you can see that there are a number of other columns you can add to the Processes tab. These can also provide you with all sorts of information that can be used in conjunction with the information provided by Windows 7's Resource Monitor. As you can see, the Select Process Page Columns dialog box contains 30 items, and describing them all here is beyond the scope of this article.
If the process you are interested in learning more about is listed as Svchost. To begin with, Svchost. To learn which services are running in a Svchost. Unfortunately, the information is pretty basic, but at least you will have a better understanding of what is happening behind a Svchost process. Have you used Windows Task Manager's features to track down details of running processes? If so, what has been your experience? As always, if you have comments or information to share about this topic, please take a moment to drop by the TechRepublic Community Forums and let us hear from you.
Greg Shultz is a freelance Technical Writer. Previously, he has worked as Documentation Specialist in the software industry, a Technical Support Specialist in educational industry, and a Technical Journalist in the computer publishing industry.
Task Manager Taskmgr. Alternatively, you can right-click the taskbar and then click Task Manager. The process or processes consuming the processor will show high CPU utilization values.
Task Manager will display the Processes tab. The process associated with the application will be highlighted. To identify the network utilization, start Task Manager and then click the Networking tab. Task Manager shows the utilization of each network adapter. The percentage of utilization is measured in relation to the reported Link Speed of the adapter. In most cases, network adapters are not capable of percent utilization; peak utilization is approximately 60 percent to 70 percent.
The Applications and Processes tabs provide a list of applications or processes that are currently active on your system. These lists are valuable because active tasks do not always display a user interface, which can make it difficult to detect activity.
Task Manager displays active processes and lets you end most items by clicking End Process. You cannot end some processes immediately; you might need to use the Services snap-in or Taskkill to end them. Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Performance tab shows red roughly matching this number Significant disk activity as shown by the LED. It's on one of the physical drive. It has indexing disabled. Backup is not running. Reboot, it goes away and comes back a few hours later.
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