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v0rtex2011-07-31 12:20:38
Windows
v0rtex, 2011-07-31 12:20:38

Windows has exhausted all the nerves (svchost loads the processor)?

Help, my strength is gone.
One fine day, my Vaio Z with Windows 7 32 bit installed began to slow down terribly. Clicking on shortcuts (for example, the “Start” or “My Computer” button) reacts after 30 seconds, Firefox starts for 2 minutes, and when typing this post, the letters appear after 5 seconds after I tapped them on the keyboard.
The culprit was found - this is the svchost process. Constantly loads the system.
43b01e6619e1f91b7dec7d2c6a5823c5.png
I googled with the query “svchost loads the windows 7 processor”
Possible reasons that they write about:
1) Viruses. I scanned the computer with Avast (full scan) and, just in case, Dr. Webovsky CureIt. No viruses found.
2) Recently installed curve software. Haven't installed anything in a couple of months. With the exception of Samsung Kies - I cut it out just in case, nothing has changed, it's not his fault.
3)
Xs On ixbt, they advised using the ProcessExplorer utility to look "inside" svchost'a and look in more detail.
As you can see in the screenshot, this something is called iphlpsvc. I don't know what to do with him.
35fcbad72f9cfd2115b7839f4f738d5a.png
Please help.

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7 answer(s)
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yeputons, 2011-07-31
@v0rtex

Perhaps this will help you.

O
Oleg Matrozov, 2011-07-31
@Mear

Go to the "task manager", find the slowing svchost, right-click -\u003e "go to services". List of services for this svchost:
a) Write here
b) Turn off one by one, looking for the culprit

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VenomBlood, 2011-07-31
@VenomBlood

In general, it is more strange that when displaying the properties, you got to RtlRegisterThread and RtlFreeThread, go to the stack of these threads and see what they give / wait for. It seems that they endlessly create-destroy threads (Well, not a spin lock, but it eats processor time there, in fact).

Y
YasonBy, 2011-07-31
@YasonBy

On the MS forums , it is advised to update the network card driver.

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XaBoK, 2011-07-31
@XaBoK

IP Helper so, IP Helper, but recently I came across a similar topic - a clumsy nvidia driver update service hung through svchost, which caused a brake due to constant timeouts
.
And if I'm not mistaken, the time is still being updated through svchost - that crap that can also cause brakes, but not through CPU load, of course, but through IO.

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v0rtex, 2011-08-01
@v0rtex

Thanks everyone. As I wrote earlier, I solved the problem by disabling the service. I won't dig anymore

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ykrop, 2011-08-01
@ykrop

on all forums they give the answer: update windows. Interference can be given by the .net service and other things associated with it (com/dcom). also encountered recently. to quickly fix the problem, you can kill this process, but in the future you need to determine which service gives such a bug.

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