Re: Process & How much Memory each uses
The headers that you see (except for the first two which are self-explanatory) are in the same order as the process counters from the list in the previous posting. It also might be possible to get a description from PerfMon or the Performance Monitoring MMC snapin which uses the same performance counters. I also found a nice looking table of the performance counters in the Task Manager help file, but when I try to view it I get "Topic not found". Perhaps your system as a better help file.
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Re: Process & How much Memory each uses
I think if I could just get a list of what the headers mean - that would help out alot.
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Re: Process & How much Memory each uses
Unfortunately, we really don't know. We request the process counters below from the process function, and Windows does the rest. I don't know of any documentation on what these mean, but they should roughly be the same as what is reported by Task Manager
Sorry that I can't be of more help.
% Processor Time
% User Time
% Privileged Time
Virtual Bytes Peak
Virtual Bytes
Page Faults/sec
Working Set Peak
Working Set
Page File Bytes Peak
Page File Bytes
Private Bytes
Thread Count
Priority Base
Elapsed Time
ID Process
Pool Paged Bytes
Pool Nonpaged Bytes
Handle Count
Creating Process ID
IO Read Operations/sec
IO Write Operations/sec
IO Data Operations/sec
IO Other Operations/sec
IO Read Bytes/sec
IO Write Bytes/sec
IO Data Bytes/sec
Other Bytes/sec
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Process & How much Memory each uses
I need to look at the processes running on a few computers on our Network & determine how much Physcial Memory each is using.
I thought I found this by double clicking on the 'Processes' selection once I expaned a computer name with in Hyena. This shows all the processes currently running on that system. Has the headers of 'VMem Peak' / 'VMem' (which I'm assuming is for Virutal Memory usage) - I thought that the 'Mem Peak' / 'Mem' was for the actual Physical Memory in the system, BUT I have a system that only has 128 MB of RAM in it but it shows it peaks @ 273 MB?
Am I reading this incorrectly? And if so, which will show me what I need to know?
Thanks,
MattTags: None
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