Vista Business - continuous disk access - slow slow - cause?

S

svista

Hi

I have Vista Business, on a fairly new (4 months old) Windows-Vista labelled
laptop, experience index is 3.1. At least once a day (I think it happens
mostly when I am copying files ( 30-40 MB) from one directory to another
(not a specific directory) but I am not sure that it is simpy a coincidence)
the computer start an intensive and continuous disk access, the swooshy
shows up (meaning the hourglass) and after waiting for like ten minutes I
end up hitting the Power button. Needless to say this is extremely annoying
and frustrating?

What can be the cause of this? How can I find root cause of this behaviour?
I suspected it is the Indexing service (which, by the way, reports diuble or
triple entries for the same physical file on the hard disk when used) and I
have stopped and disbled it but to no avail.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.
 
M

Mr. Arnold

svista said:
Hi

I have Vista Business, on a fairly new (4 months old) Windows-Vista
labelled laptop, experience index is 3.1. At least once a day (I think
it happens mostly when I am copying files ( 30-40 MB) from one directory
to another (not a specific directory) but I am not sure that it is simpy a
coincidence) the computer start an intensive and continuous disk access,
the swooshy shows up (meaning the hourglass) and after waiting for like
ten minutes I end up hitting the Power button. Needless to say this is
extremely annoying and frustrating?

What can be the cause of this? How can I find root cause of this
behaviour? I suspected it is the Indexing service (which, by the way,
reports diuble or triple entries for the same physical file on the hard
disk when used) and I have stopped and disbled it but to no avail.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.



You can use the Sysinternals tools to possibly see what is happening; like
the disk monitoring tools.


http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/default.mspx

You may also what to use Process Explorer to see process activity. You can
right click a process and go to Properties where you can look at several
things for a give process that's running.
 
R

Ryan Hayward

I too have the hard drive issues with vista, light never stops flashing.
Like he said, its probably the indexing but hopefully it's not too
intensive that it will wear out the drive.
 
M

Mr. Arnold

Ryan Hayward said:
I too have the hard drive issues with vista, light never stops flashing.
Like he said, its probably the indexing but hopefully it's not too
intensive that it will wear out the drive.

For all you know, it could be malware uploading the entire HD.

A person I worked with friend had him come over to check things about as to
why his HD light was constantly flashing all the time, and things was dead
slow every time the machine connected to the Internet.

He comes to find out that malware was running on the machine uploading the
HD. :)
 
T

The poster formerly known as Nina DiBoy

svista said:
Hi

I have Vista Business, on a fairly new (4 months old) Windows-Vista
labelled laptop, experience index is 3.1. At least once a day (I
think it happens mostly when I am copying files ( 30-40 MB) from one
directory to another (not a specific directory) but I am not sure that
it is simpy a coincidence) the computer start an intensive and
continuous disk access, the swooshy shows up (meaning the hourglass) and
after waiting for like ten minutes I end up hitting the Power button.
Needless to say this is extremely annoying and frustrating?

What can be the cause of this? How can I find root cause of this
behaviour? I suspected it is the Indexing service (which, by the way,
reports diuble or triple entries for the same physical file on the hard
disk when used) and I have stopped and disbled it but to no avail.

Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Try changing the defrag service to manual.

--
Priceless quotes in m.p.w.vista.general group:
http://protectfreedom.tripod.com/kick.html

Most recent idiotic quote added to KICK (Klassic Idiotic Caption Kooks):
"They hacked the Microsoft website to make it think a linux box was a
windows box. Thats called hacking. People who do hacking are called
hackers."

"Good poets borrow; great poets steal."
- T. S. Eliot
 
Y

yynn

I had already done that before the problem arised. Scheduled
defragmentation is disabled on the computer.
 
Y

yynn

I made that hypothesis too. I checked TCP and UDP connections and NIC
activity.... apparently no data upload is being performend during
intense disk activity but again the computer becomes practically
unusable during that intense disk activity. I am using antivirus and
antispyware software in addition to Vista built-in protections....
 
A

Adam Albright

I made that hypothesis too. I checked TCP and UDP connections and NIC
activity.... apparently no data upload is being performend during
intense disk activity but again the computer becomes practically
unusable during that intense disk activity. I am using antivirus and
antispyware software in addition to Vista built-in protections....

Instead of guessing you can actually SEE what Vista is up to.

Bring up Task Manager, then Resources Monitor, expand the disk option
so you can see the details and hopefully figure out why your hard
drive is trashing around.

The usual suspects are in no particular order:

1. indexing (can be disabled)
2. shadow copy housecleaning, super fetch BS...
3. defraging in progress
4. low system resources
5. Spyware detection, anti-virus sweep in progress

If your system is also sluggish, you may be asking your computer to do
too much at once and it is constantly shuffling things from RAM to
Virtual Memory and back again which can cause your hard drive to go
nuts.
 
C

Charlie Tame

I had already done that before the problem arised. Scheduled
defragmentation is disabled on the computer.


Could try looking at the properties for your hard drives. If Index for
faster searching is checked try unchecking it.

Also check to see if anything like an antivirus program is checking
things unnecessarily. Of course task manager should help.
 
R

Ryan Hayward

Adam Albright said:
Instead of guessing you can actually SEE what Vista is up to.

Bring up Task Manager, then Resources Monitor, expand the disk option
so you can see the details and hopefully figure out why your hard
drive is trashing around.

The usual suspects are in no particular order:

1. indexing (can be disabled)
2. shadow copy housecleaning, super fetch BS...
3. defraging in progress
4. low system resources
5. Spyware detection, anti-virus sweep in progress

If your system is also sluggish, you may be asking your computer to do
too much at once and it is constantly shuffling things from RAM to
Virtual Memory and back again which can cause your hard drive to go
nuts.

Yep, perhaps if he is using the aero theme with under a gig of memory,
disable that too.
 

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