MagicAndre1981 Posted April 5, 2014 Author Share Posted April 5, 2014 Give me the ProcMon log and a new xbootgmr trace with this command:xbootmgr -trace boot -traceFlags BASE+LATENCY+DISK_IO_INIT+DISPATCHER+FILE_IO+FILE_IO_INIT+FILENAME+POWER+Registry -stackwalk profile+CSwitch+ReadyThread+DiskReadInit+DiskWriteInit+RegQueryKey+RegOpenKey+RegCloseKey+RegSetInformation+RegSetValue+RegDeleteValue+RegQueryValue -resultPath C:\TEMPWith this command I capture wait and registry data. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Oliver84 Posted April 6, 2014 Share Posted April 6, 2014 Give me the ProcMon log and a new xbootgmr trace with this command:xbootmgr -trace boot -traceFlags BASE+LATENCY+DISK_IO_INIT+DISPATCHER+FILE_IO+FILE_IO_INIT+FILENAME+POWER+Registry -stackwalk profile+CSwitch+ReadyThread+DiskReadInit+DiskWriteInit+RegQueryKey+RegOpenKey+RegCloseKey+RegSetInformation+RegSetValue+RegDeleteValue+RegQueryValue -resultPath C:\TEMPWith this command I capture wait and registry data.Did it! Do you need the ETL file? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted April 6, 2014 Author Share Posted April 6, 2014 sure. Compress it as 7z to reduce the size, upload it and send me the link via PM. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nqduy Posted April 19, 2014 Share Posted April 19, 2014 Hello,I PM'ed you the etl file. Thank you so much! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted April 19, 2014 Author Share Posted April 19, 2014 the trace is too large. I can't open it correctly. But from what I see, the issue is large CPU usage for a long time. Use this command:xbootmgr -trace boot -traceFlags BASE+LATENCY+DISPATCHER+FILE_IO+FILENAME+POWER -stackwalk profile+CSwitch+ReadyThread -resultPath C:\TEMPAlso use the 8.1 SDK. You used the 8.0 SDK!!!!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nqduy Posted April 19, 2014 Share Posted April 19, 2014 Hello,I sent you another one. Unfortunately it's still quite large. I can open it with Performance Analyzer on my system so please let me know if you'd like me to take a screen shot or anything. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted April 20, 2014 Author Share Posted April 20, 2014 yeah, still too large. Give my a trace with this command:xbootmgr -trace boot -traceFlags BASE+CSWITCH+DRIVERS+POWER -stackwalk profile Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Max_04 Posted May 1, 2014 Share Posted May 1, 2014 (edited) My Vaio vpc-yb1s1e/s has a cursor lag issue, although I disabled unnecessary services and removed/reinstalled graphic drivers, You're really my last hope.Thank you. Edited May 1, 2014 by Max_04 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted May 1, 2014 Author Share Posted May 1, 2014 (edited) what do you mean with cursor issue?The largest issue with your boot is, that your HDD is very busy during boot. Edited May 1, 2014 by MagicAndre1981 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Max_04 Posted May 1, 2014 Share Posted May 1, 2014 (edited) what do you mean with cursor issue?The largest issue with your boot is, that your HDD is very busy during boot.There is a huge delay when I move my cursor in different points of the screen.Can you suggest me a way to know the exact cause of this HDD loading? Edited May 1, 2014 by Max_04 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted May 1, 2014 Author Share Posted May 1, 2014 your TOSHIBA MK3265GSXN is a slow 5400rpm drive. You can't expect miracles from such a slow drive. Get an SSD. You can find good ones with 200GB for 100€. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikegb Posted May 18, 2014 Share Posted May 18, 2014 I have a Server 2012 R2 system booting from an Intel SSD. Since installing Chrome, I noticed a 15 second hang during boot every time. Uninstalling Chrome doesn't change the behavior and I don't really think Chrome is the issue. I followed the steps in this posting no how to trace the boot times and the results do NOT show this 15 second hang. However, I isolated it down to the OSLoader. The problem does NOT show up in the ETL file. For example, osLoaderDuration only shows 877 as the time: <timing bootDoneViaExplorer="15107" bootDoneViaPostBoot="-1" osLoaderDuration="877" postBootRequiredIdleTime="10000" postBootDisturbance="9223372011747" pnpBootStartStartTime="37" pnpBootStartEndTime="854" pnpBootStartDuration="817" pnpSystemStartStartTime="1013" pnpSystemStartEndTime="1381" pnpSystemStartDuration="368"> So what I did during boot is press <F8> to get to the boot options. I think put the cursor over the enable boot logging option and at exactly 14:19:00, I pressed <Enter>. When I did that, there was very brief disk activity and then no disk activity for ~15 seconds. Then the boot continued as normal. What's interesting is looking at ntblog.txt as you see here: 5 18 2014 14:19:16.499BOOTLOG_LOADED \SystemRoot\system32\ntoskrnl.exe So there was an ~15-16 second delay from when I told Windows to boot to when the boot log started logging activity. Any idea what is causing this ~15 second hang? Since ETL doesn't show the problem, how can I figure out what Windows is doing during this time? THANKS!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mikegb Posted May 18, 2014 Share Posted May 18, 2014 Regarding my Post #327, I think I stumbled onto something. I use Hyper-V on this system and I have XDC and Virtualization Technology both enabled in the BIOS. If I disable either one, this 15 second pre osloader hang goes away. I only get this 15 second "freeze" if both XDC and Virtualization Technology are enabled. I checked with HP and my system has the last BIOS available for the system. Any ideas? Thanks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MagicAndre1981 Posted May 19, 2014 Author Share Posted May 19, 2014 I don't use Hyper-V so I've never seen this. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
entactogen Posted May 20, 2014 Share Posted May 20, 2014 Hi Andre, thanks for the Tutorial. A couple of days ago my Zenbook UX32VD (Win 8) started to take 4 - 6 Minutes to boot up for no reason I'm aware of. The full boot summary is here: http://www42.zippyshare.com/v/98947187/file.html . From what I can tell the culprit is the SATA AHCI Controller which takes over 4 Minutes to load (the Driver is up-to-date). I wasn't sure if it's a good idea to disable it for testing so I didn't. <phase name="bootStart" startTime="29" endTime="246530" duration="246501"> <pnpObject name="PCI\VEN_8086+DEV_1E03+SUBSYS_15071043+REV_04\3+11583659+2+FA" type="Device" activity="Start" startTime="2515" endTime="242870" duration="240356" prePendTime="240356" description="Intel® 7 Series Chipset Family SATA AHCI Controller" friendlyName=""/> Any help to understand or even solve the problem would be greatly appreciated. Gruß aus Dortmund Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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