![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
|
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
We have 2 identical Dell XPS desktop PCs, both with duo 2.66
processors, 240 GB hard drives, and running Vista Home Premium SP1. For a few years now we've been using a Linksys cable modem which has 4 Ethernet outlets (numbered 1-4) and paired antennas for Wireless-G. My PC was on Ethernet output 1 and my wife's PC was on a Wireless-G adapter. Recently my ISP doubled its speed to 16,000 kbps, but this seemed to have very little effect on my wife's Wireless speed. Rather than hassle with the wireless system, I uninstalled the Wireless-G adapter and ran a new Ethernet cable from output 2 to my wife's PC. This worked great and my wife now is getting speeds matching mine. The weird thing is that when both PCs are turned on and connected to the Internet, my PC (Ethernet 1 output) seems to be continually accessing the hard drive. While this is happening, the output 1 and output 2 LED's on the modem are madly flickering, as is the disk access light on the PC. No unusual hard disk activity is going on with the wife's PC. If I shut down either PC, this excessive hard disk activity doesn't take place and the output light (1 or 2) is steady. I've even tried leaving both systems totally inactive for many hours, other than an automatic check for mail every 5 minutes. Every 1/2 hour or so I'd look in and see that the hard drive activity is still going on and the output lights are flickering. Whatever is going on is happening whether the PCs are active or idle. This has been going on for 3 days now, 16 hours a day, ever since I added the new Ethernet line! Can anyone tell me why there's so much hard disk activity? If it's a problem, how do I fix it? Thanks, Bill |
|
|||
|
I would disable index services. Run a Trendmicro free virus scan. Try Avast Pro trial anti-virus software to find any nasty things. I dropped wireless because it was too flaky and could not maintain speed. I installed a CAT 6 backbone on a Dlink DGL-4300 1 Gbps router with DGS-2205 switches on each end of the CAT 6 plenum grade backbone cable. Each workstation is 1 Gbps CAT 6 connections. I enabled Jumbo frames=9000 and 9014 on my workstations. I can copy files between them at 66 MB/s. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) Supermicro X7DWA-N server board pair of Intel E5430 quad core 2.66 GHz Xeons 16GB DDR667 SAS RAID eVGA 8800 GTS 640 MB video card |
|
|||
|
Hi Bill
Many useful tools here may help.. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...s/default.aspx I would possibly start with tcpview http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...2acd2c271.aspx "Bill" wrote in message ... We have 2 identical Dell XPS desktop PCs, both with duo 2.66 processors, 240 GB hard drives, and running Vista Home Premium SP1. For a few years now we've been using a Linksys cable modem which has 4 Ethernet outlets (numbered 1-4) and paired antennas for Wireless-G. My PC was on Ethernet output 1 and my wife's PC was on a Wireless-G adapter. Recently my ISP doubled its speed to 16,000 kbps, but this seemed to have very little effect on my wife's Wireless speed. Rather than hassle with the wireless system, I uninstalled the Wireless-G adapter and ran a new Ethernet cable from output 2 to my wife's PC. This worked great and my wife now is getting speeds matching mine. The weird thing is that when both PCs are turned on and connected to the Internet, my PC (Ethernet 1 output) seems to be continually accessing the hard drive. While this is happening, the output 1 and output 2 LED's on the modem are madly flickering, as is the disk access light on the PC. No unusual hard disk activity is going on with the wife's PC. If I shut down either PC, this excessive hard disk activity doesn't take place and the output light (1 or 2) is steady. I've even tried leaving both systems totally inactive for many hours, other than an automatic check for mail every 5 minutes. Every 1/2 hour or so I'd look in and see that the hard drive activity is still going on and the output lights are flickering. Whatever is going on is happening whether the PCs are active or idle. This has been going on for 3 days now, 16 hours a day, ever since I added the new Ethernet line! Can anyone tell me why there's so much hard disk activity? If it's a problem, how do I fix it? Thanks, Bill |
|
|||
|
Two possibilities that I can think of.. I'm certainly not an expert
but you might look into; 1. Microsoft update being active when this is happening. 2. The possibility of a Root kit that is causing the problem. To check on the possibility of a Root kit go to: http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s.../bb897445.aspx "Teneo" wrote in message ... Hi Bill Many useful tools here may help.. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...s/default.aspx I would possibly start with tcpview http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/s...2acd2c271.aspx "Bill" wrote in message ... We have 2 identical Dell XPS desktop PCs, both with duo 2.66 processors, 240 GB hard drives, and running Vista Home Premium SP1. For a few years now we've been using a Linksys cable modem which has 4 Ethernet outlets (numbered 1-4) and paired antennas for Wireless-G. My PC was on Ethernet output 1 and my wife's PC was on a Wireless-G adapter. Recently my ISP doubled its speed to 16,000 kbps, but this seemed to have very little effect on my wife's Wireless speed. Rather than hassle with the wireless system, I uninstalled the Wireless-G adapter and ran a new Ethernet cable from output 2 to my wife's PC. This worked great and my wife now is getting speeds matching mine. The weird thing is that when both PCs are turned on and connected to the Internet, my PC (Ethernet 1 output) seems to be continually accessing the hard drive. While this is happening, the output 1 and output 2 LED's on the modem are madly flickering, as is the disk access light on the PC. No unusual hard disk activity is going on with the wife's PC. If I shut down either PC, this excessive hard disk activity doesn't take place and the output light (1 or 2) is steady. I've even tried leaving both systems totally inactive for many hours, other than an automatic check for mail every 5 minutes. Every 1/2 hour or so I'd look in and see that the hard drive activity is still going on and the output lights are flickering. Whatever is going on is happening whether the PCs are active or idle. This has been going on for 3 days now, 16 hours a day, ever since I added the new Ethernet line! Can anyone tell me why there's so much hard disk activity? If it's a problem, how do I fix it? Thanks, Bill |
|
|||
|
On Fri, 6 Jun 2008 14:02:34 -0500, SCSIraidGURU
wrote: I would disable index services. I paused the index services . . . no change. Run a Trendmicro free virus scan. What a turkey . . . first it told me that I didn't have Java, which was not true. I had 6.5, so I updated it to 6.6 to get past this error. Then the program told me that it could not download some important files, without telling me what these files were or how to get around the error, so I gave up on Trendmicro. Try Avast Pro trial anti-virus software to find any nasty things. That worked fine, but no problems were found after scanning 325,000 files! Avast Pro seemed like a nice program, but since I got a free 3-year subscription to McAfee's security center with the purchase of my PC, I uninstalled Avast. To make a long story short, I spend hours disabling and re-enabling various services - then I finally found the culprit! It's something called "McAfee Network Agent" . . . so I guess my free subscriptin to McAfee is worth what I paid! No real problem, I've found a coupleof other minor bugs in McAfee's software and notified their tech support. In both cases they corrected the problem and sent me a thank you E-mail. So I'll report this problem and run with the Network Agent disabled, hoping that I don't get bitten on the rear end! Thanks for the help, Bill |
|
|||
|
"Clear Windows" wrote in message
... Short answer vista was made by monkeys "Bill" wrote in message ... We have 2 identical Dell XPS desktop PCs, both with duo 2.66 processors, 240 GB hard drives, and running Vista Home Premium SP1. For a few years now we've been using a Linksys cable modem which has 4 Ethernet outlets (numbered 1-4) and paired antennas for Wireless-G. My PC was on Ethernet output 1 and my wife's PC was on a Wireless-G adapter. Recently my ISP doubled its speed to 16,000 kbps, but this seemed to have very little effect on my wife's Wireless speed. Rather than hassle with the wireless system, I uninstalled the Wireless-G adapter and ran a new Ethernet cable from output 2 to my wife's PC. This worked great and my wife now is getting speeds matching mine. The weird thing is that when both PCs are turned on and connected to the Internet, my PC (Ethernet 1 output) seems to be continually accessing the hard drive. While this is happening, the output 1 and output 2 LED's on the modem are madly flickering, as is the disk access light on the PC. No unusual hard disk activity is going on with the wife's PC. If I shut down either PC, this excessive hard disk activity doesn't take place and the output light (1 or 2) is steady. I've even tried leaving both systems totally inactive for many hours, other than an automatic check for mail every 5 minutes. Every 1/2 hour or so I'd look in and see that the hard drive activity is still going on and the output lights are flickering. Whatever is going on is happening whether the PCs are active or idle. This has been going on for 3 days now, 16 hours a day, ever since I added the new Ethernet line! Can anyone tell me why there's so much hard disk activity? If it's a problem, how do I fix it? Thanks, Bill To find out what file is being written to, go to Control Panel-Administrative Tools-Reliability and Performance Monitor Expand the Disk tab. Click on the Write column heading of the revealed report. That will sort write disk activity from largest to smallest. Whatever shows up on top is the likely culprit. Tells us what that is. Dan Mercer |
|
|||
|
"Bill" wrote in message
... We have 2 identical Dell XPS desktop PCs, both with duo 2.66 processors, 240 GB hard drives, and running Vista Home Premium SP1. For a few years now we've been using a Linksys cable modem which has 4 Ethernet outlets (numbered 1-4) and paired antennas for Wireless-G. My PC was on Ethernet output 1 and my wife's PC was on a Wireless-G adapter. Recently my ISP doubled its speed to 16,000 kbps, but this seemed to have very little effect on my wife's Wireless speed. Rather than hassle with the wireless system, I uninstalled the Wireless-G adapter and ran a new Ethernet cable from output 2 to my wife's PC. This worked great and my wife now is getting speeds matching mine. The weird thing is that when both PCs are turned on and connected to the Internet, my PC (Ethernet 1 output) seems to be continually accessing the hard drive. While this is happening, the output 1 and output 2 LED's on the modem are madly flickering, as is the disk access light on the PC. No unusual hard disk activity is going on with the wife's PC. If I shut down either PC, this excessive hard disk activity doesn't take place and the output light (1 or 2) is steady. I've even tried leaving both systems totally inactive for many hours, other than an automatic check for mail every 5 minutes. Every 1/2 hour or so I'd look in and see that the hard drive activity is still going on and the output lights are flickering. Whatever is going on is happening whether the PCs are active or idle. This has been going on for 3 days now, 16 hours a day, ever since I added the new Ethernet line! Can anyone tell me why there's so much hard disk activity? If it's a problem, how do I fix it? It's possible that your wife's computer is using your computer as a gateway. But is Internet Connection Sharing is being used, the internet connection should be lost when your computer is shut down. Make sure the TCP/IP settings in Connection Properties are set to automatic (if you are using DHCP in you router). ss. |
|
|||
|
The suggestions you gave were pretty good and short. The explanation of your
blazing systems is less important to us. Thanks for sharing. .....just kidding! "The farce be with you" "SCSIraidGURU" wrote: I would disable index services. Run a Trendmicro free virus scan. Try Avast Pro trial anti-virus software to find any nasty things. I dropped wireless because it was too flaky and could not maintain speed. I installed a CAT 6 backbone on a Dlink DGL-4300 1 Gbps router with DGS-2205 switches on each end of the CAT 6 plenum grade backbone cable. Each workstation is 1 Gbps CAT 6 connections. I enabled Jumbo frames=9000 and 9014 on my workstations. I can copy files between them at 66 MB/s. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) Supermicro X7DWA-N server board pair of Intel E5430 quad core 2.66 GHz Xeons 16GB DDR667 SAS RAID eVGA 8800 GTS 640 MB video card |
|
|||
|
I'm glad you found the problem. I still wish that we did not have to run
programs such as that because of the mileage it puts on the drives. Good thing big HD are really cheap now days. -- Sid "The force be with you" "Bill" wrote: On Fri, 6 Jun 2008 14:02:34 -0500, SCSIraidGURU wrote: I would disable index services. I paused the index services . . . no change. Run a Trendmicro free virus scan. What a turkey . . . first it told me that I didn't have Java, which was not true. I had 6.5, so I updated it to 6.6 to get past this error. Then the program told me that it could not download some important files, without telling me what these files were or how to get around the error, so I gave up on Trendmicro. Try Avast Pro trial anti-virus software to find any nasty things. That worked fine, but no problems were found after scanning 325,000 files! Avast Pro seemed like a nice program, but since I got a free 3-year subscription to McAfee's security center with the purchase of my PC, I uninstalled Avast. To make a long story short, I spend hours disabling and re-enabling various services - then I finally found the culprit! It's something called "McAfee Network Agent" . . . so I guess my free subscriptin to McAfee is worth what I paid! No real problem, I've found a coupleof other minor bugs in McAfee's software and notified their tech support. In both cases they corrected the problem and sent me a thank you E-mail. So I'll report this problem and run with the Network Agent disabled, hoping that I don't get bitten on the rear end! Thanks for the help, Bill |
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|