- Oct 23, 2000
- 9,200
- 765
- 126
I just installed several new Dell Optiplex 3020s running Windows 7 Pro at a small office I support, running virtually identical applications on all of the machines, and had no issues except on one computer that has insanely high RAM usage and feels slower than a 2000 era Celeron (these are quad core i5 machines with 8GB RAM). I have narrowed the problem down but am not sure why it is happening.
One instance of SVCHOST has been seen using 2-3GB of RAM within 10 minutes of booting and that keeps increasing to as much as 18-20GB of RAM (all physical ram plus all of the somewhat oversized swap file) if it is allowed to run for an extended period of time. This is not the normal Windows 7 prefetch caching as it has a huge negative effect on the performance of the computer.
The services associated with the instance of SVCHOST in Task Manager are:
AeLookupSvc (Application Experience)
Appinfo (Application Information)
BITS (Background Intelligent Transfer Service)
gpsvc (Group Policy Client)
IKEEXT (IKE and AuthIP IPsec Keying Modules)
iphlpsvc (IP Helper)
LanmanServer (Server)
ProfSvc (User Profile Service)
Schedule (Task Scheduler)
SENS (System Event Notification Service)
ShellHWDetection (Shell Hardware Detection)
Themes (Themes)
Winmgmt (Windows Management Instrumentation)
wuauserv (Windows Update)
Killing that SVCHOST process does release all of the RAM, dropping memory and swap file usage from 99% to around 30%, and the computer starts responding quickly again temporarily, but that kills quite a few apparently important services so stopping the process it isn't a good long term solution.
Process Explorer lists the same services under the same process but I haven't been able to find a way to get it to tell me how much RAM each individual service is using so I don't know how to tell which one is causing the problem except by disabling each service individually and then rebooting the computer again to watch the effects. I hesitate to do this, though, since disabling some of those services might prevent Windows from booting properly.
I would appreciate any ideas how to fix this since it makes the computer virtually unusable.
Thanks.
One instance of SVCHOST has been seen using 2-3GB of RAM within 10 minutes of booting and that keeps increasing to as much as 18-20GB of RAM (all physical ram plus all of the somewhat oversized swap file) if it is allowed to run for an extended period of time. This is not the normal Windows 7 prefetch caching as it has a huge negative effect on the performance of the computer.
The services associated with the instance of SVCHOST in Task Manager are:
AeLookupSvc (Application Experience)
Appinfo (Application Information)
BITS (Background Intelligent Transfer Service)
gpsvc (Group Policy Client)
IKEEXT (IKE and AuthIP IPsec Keying Modules)
iphlpsvc (IP Helper)
LanmanServer (Server)
ProfSvc (User Profile Service)
Schedule (Task Scheduler)
SENS (System Event Notification Service)
ShellHWDetection (Shell Hardware Detection)
Themes (Themes)
Winmgmt (Windows Management Instrumentation)
wuauserv (Windows Update)
Killing that SVCHOST process does release all of the RAM, dropping memory and swap file usage from 99% to around 30%, and the computer starts responding quickly again temporarily, but that kills quite a few apparently important services so stopping the process it isn't a good long term solution.
Process Explorer lists the same services under the same process but I haven't been able to find a way to get it to tell me how much RAM each individual service is using so I don't know how to tell which one is causing the problem except by disabling each service individually and then rebooting the computer again to watch the effects. I hesitate to do this, though, since disabling some of those services might prevent Windows from booting properly.
I would appreciate any ideas how to fix this since it makes the computer virtually unusable.
Thanks.
Last edited: