System Idle Process

J

Jeff Granger

Task manager shows me that of the many applications running on my XP machine
the only one using significant CPU resources is "System Idle Process" taking
95 CPUs (anyone know what the units are??).

Is there a way to discover what this process is doing, or is a case of
shutting it down to see what crashes?

Jeff
 
F

Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE/WM

"Jeff Granger" <jeff.granger@btclick.com> wrote in message
news:-NudnYjykYNnMhbbRVnyvwA@bt.com...
> Task manager shows me that of the many applications running on my XP
> machine the only one using significant CPU resources is "System Idle
> Process" taking 95 CPUs (anyone know what the units are??).
>
> Is there a way to discover what this process is doing, or is a case of
> shutting it down to see what crashes?
>
> Jeff
>


It isn't doing anything. It's a record of how much of the time the CPU is
idle.

--
Frank Saunders, MS-MVP OE/WM
Do not send mail.
 
P

Patti MacLeod

Hi Jeff,

The CPU column displays the percentage of CPU usage for the process listed
under Image Name. The System Idle Process displays the CPU "power" that is
waiting to be used.......thus, it is "idle", waiting for something to do.



Regards,

--
Patti MacLeod
Microsoft MVP - Windows Shell/User


"Jeff Granger" wrote:

> Task manager shows me that of the many applications running on my XP machine
> the only one using significant CPU resources is "System Idle Process" taking
> 95 CPUs (anyone know what the units are??).
>
> Is there a way to discover what this process is doing, or is a case of
> shutting it down to see what crashes?
>
> Jeff
>
>
>
 
B

Bruce Chambers

Jeff Granger wrote:
> Task manager shows me that of the many applications running on my XP machine
> the only one using significant CPU resources is "System Idle Process" taking
> 95 CPUs ...



>... (anyone know what the units are??).
>


Percentage.


> Is there a way to discover what this process is doing, or is a case of
> shutting it down to see what crashes?
>
> Jeff
>
>



Break out a dictionary and look up the word "idle," sometime. -}
The "System Idle Process" metric is the amount/percentage of time that
your CPU has *nothing* to do. A reading of 98-99% is generally
considered a good thing, and readings above 90% are normal. Think of
it like a car's engine idling in your driveway before you place the
car in gear.


--

Bruce Chambers

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Many people would rather die than think in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

On Wed, 4 Jul 2007 15:34:36 +0100, "Jeff Granger"
<jeff.granger@btclick.com> wrote:

> Task manager shows me that of the many applications running on my XP machine
> the only one using significant CPU resources is "System Idle Process" taking
> 95 CPUs (anyone know what the units are??).
>
> Is there a way to discover what this process is doing, or is a case of
> shutting it down to see what crashes?





"System Idle Process" is not any problem at all. That's just the name
for what the system is doing when it's not doing anything. It's there
to make the total add up to 100%.

--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 

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