Reply to this thread
Forum question
Started by NarbiusTheGreat | | 28 answers
I have been having this problem for... well let's just say a month or even longer. It is one of the worst nightmares I have ever went through. It is so bad. I have posted on this forum before, but without a picture.
Part list at the end.
http://imgur.com/0WSUcrH (This is taken while playing Team Fortress 2)
http://imgur.com/jwbDiK3 (This is taken while playing Garry's Mod)
These ANNOYING lag spikes. Or should I say freezes, where my fps just goes to zero for not even half a second, and it can become REALLY annoying, and screw me up. They are very noticeable, and sometimes the frametime can get up and hit the top of the graph! I tried doing so many things-
-Heat? No. CPU can get to 40-50 degrees celsius while gaming. GPU can get to 70, but it really depends on the game. In TF2 it is around 40-50 celsius. There is barely any dust inside, I got this computer like 3-2 months ago.
-CPU core parking? I doubt it would even cause it, and no.
-HDD? I tried it on a SSD and HDD with the same exact lag spikes happening.
-Software? I reinstalled Windows. That means deleting everything with it. So no.
-Replace the GPU? Tried it, didn't do anything. Same lag spikes occur using the iGPU (Intel HD 4600)
-Take USB devices out? Tried it, didn't do anything what so ever.
- Updating drivers? Already did update every driver. Also tried downgrading a couple with no luck.
- Updating BIOS? Already did it.
- Setting everything to max performance, not power saver? I disabled Speedstep, I enabled Max Performance in Power Options, everything (I believe).
- Ram Errors? I did a memtest in Windows. Didn't find anything, and I tested each stick individually with no luck.
- Internet issues? Well it happens on my Laptop, but not on my Brothers laptop. What's up with that?
- I don't think it is Steam, Google Chrome, or anything else causing it.
- Virus's? Malware? lagspikecauser.exe? Nope. I have MSE and MalwareBytes. I also tried disabling both of those in-game with no luck.
- Wireless Adapter? Using Wired networking doesn't change, nor fix the issue. I also tried it without installing my wireless adapter's driver and using wired, didn't fix it.
Some peoples suggestions: Send in the motherboard, test with someone else (don't have anyone else)
I can't think of anything else causing it. Sorry about the long list. It really feels like this problem is impossible to solve. I don't really like testing to see if it is a certain piece of hardware causing it.
Has anyone, ANYONE had this exact issue before? It drives me crazy.
Part list: https://pcpartpicker.com/user/topguythegreat/saved/hLMw...
All parts are being used except one of the fans which makes a weird sound for some reason.
Part list at the end.
http://imgur.com/0WSUcrH (This is taken while playing Team Fortress 2)
http://imgur.com/jwbDiK3 (This is taken while playing Garry's Mod)
These ANNOYING lag spikes. Or should I say freezes, where my fps just goes to zero for not even half a second, and it can become REALLY annoying, and screw me up. They are very noticeable, and sometimes the frametime can get up and hit the top of the graph! I tried doing so many things-
-Heat? No. CPU can get to 40-50 degrees celsius while gaming. GPU can get to 70, but it really depends on the game. In TF2 it is around 40-50 celsius. There is barely any dust inside, I got this computer like 3-2 months ago.
-CPU core parking? I doubt it would even cause it, and no.
-HDD? I tried it on a SSD and HDD with the same exact lag spikes happening.
-Software? I reinstalled Windows. That means deleting everything with it. So no.
-Replace the GPU? Tried it, didn't do anything. Same lag spikes occur using the iGPU (Intel HD 4600)
-Take USB devices out? Tried it, didn't do anything what so ever.
- Updating drivers? Already did update every driver. Also tried downgrading a couple with no luck.
- Updating BIOS? Already did it.
- Setting everything to max performance, not power saver? I disabled Speedstep, I enabled Max Performance in Power Options, everything (I believe).
- Ram Errors? I did a memtest in Windows. Didn't find anything, and I tested each stick individually with no luck.
- Internet issues? Well it happens on my Laptop, but not on my Brothers laptop. What's up with that?
- I don't think it is Steam, Google Chrome, or anything else causing it.
- Virus's? Malware? lagspikecauser.exe? Nope. I have MSE and MalwareBytes. I also tried disabling both of those in-game with no luck.
- Wireless Adapter? Using Wired networking doesn't change, nor fix the issue. I also tried it without installing my wireless adapter's driver and using wired, didn't fix it.
Some peoples suggestions: Send in the motherboard, test with someone else (don't have anyone else)
I can't think of anything else causing it. Sorry about the long list. It really feels like this problem is impossible to solve. I don't really like testing to see if it is a certain piece of hardware causing it.
Has anyone, ANYONE had this exact issue before? It drives me crazy.
Part list: https://pcpartpicker.com/user/topguythegreat/saved/hLMw...
All parts are being used except one of the fans which makes a weird sound for some reason.
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 3:53:46 PM
skit75 said:
NarbiusTheGreat said:
skit75 said:
Do you have a discreet audio card you can try in this machine? Any audio card will do. Then disable onboard/integrated audio in your BIOS.I do not, would my USB Headset work without the onboard audio on my motherboard?
Depends.... I believe some of them do have their own "audio card" inside. Which cans do you have?
Yeah this one had a audio card in it, disabling it sadly didn't change the latency. I noticed something though. If I remove my network adapter, don't move my mouse at all, and don't touch my keyboard at all, then the latency from the usb ports stops completely. That makes sense, but perhaps the USB ports are causing this issue.
skit75
October 17, 2014 3:27:11 PM
NarbiusTheGreat said:
skit75 said:
Do you have a discreet audio card you can try in this machine? Any audio card will do. Then disable onboard/integrated audio in your BIOS.I do not, would my USB Headset work without the onboard audio on my motherboard?
Depends.... I believe some of them do have their own "audio card" inside. Which cans do you have?
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 3:23:26 PM
skit75
October 17, 2014 2:34:47 PM
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 2:26:23 PM
New latencymon info:
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CONCLUSION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Your system appears to be having trouble handling real-time audio and other tasks. You are likely to experience buffer underruns appearing as drop outs, clicks or pops. One problem may be related to power management, disable CPU throttling settings in Control Panel and BIOS setup. Check for BIOS updates.
LatencyMon has been analyzing your system for 0:11:54 (h:mm:ss) on all processors.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SYSTEM INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Computer name: CLASSIFIED
OS version: Windows 7 Service Pack 1, 6.1, build: 7601 (x64)
Hardware: All Series, ASUS, ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC., Z97-A
CPU: GenuineIntel Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4690 CPU @ 3.50GHz
Logical processors: 4
Processor groups: 1
RAM: 8133 MB total
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU SPEED
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Reported CPU speed: 3497.0 MHz
Measured CPU speed: 3666.0 MHz (approx.)
Note: reported execution times may be calculated based on a fixed reported CPU speed. Disable variable speed settings like Intel Speed Step and AMD Cool N Quiet in the BIOS setup for more accurate results.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
MEASURED INTERRUPT TO USER PROCESS LATENCIES
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The interrupt to process latency reflects the measured interval that a usermode process needed to respond to a hardware request from the moment the interrupt service routine started execution. This includes the scheduling and execution of a DPC routine, the signaling of an event and the waking up of a usermode thread from an idle wait state in response to that event.
Highest measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 8204.882004
Average measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 1.659171
Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 5021.055235
Average measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 0.605034
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED ISRs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interrupt service routines are routines installed by the OS and device drivers that execute in response to a hardware interrupt signal.
Highest ISR routine execution time (µs): 101.586503
Driver with highest ISR routine execution time: USBPORT.SYS - USB 1.1 & 2.0 Port Driver, Microsoft Corporation
Highest reported total ISR routine time (%): 0.277263
Driver with highest ISR total time: dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
Total time spent in ISRs (%) 0.350397
ISR count (execution time <250 µs): 1800143
ISR count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 500-999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED DPCs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
DPC routines are part of the interrupt servicing dispatch mechanism and disable the possibility for a process to utilize the CPU while it is interrupted until the DPC has finished execution.
Highest DPC routine execution time (µs): 306.614813
Driver with highest DPC routine execution time: nvlddmkm.sys - NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, Version 344.11 , NVIDIA Corporation
Highest reported total DPC routine time (%): 0.248724
Driver with highest DPC total execution time: iusb3xhc.sys - Intel(R) USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller Driver, Intel Corporation
Total time spent in DPCs (%) 0.549394
DPC count (execution time <250 µs): 5996608
DPC count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 500-999 µs): 5
DPC count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED HARD PAGEFAULTS
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Hard pagefaults are events that get triggered by making use of virtual memory that is not resident in RAM but backed by a memory mapped file on disk. The process of resolving the hard pagefault requires reading in the memory from disk while the process is interrupted and blocked from execution.
NOTE: some processes were hit by hard pagefaults. If these were programs producing audio, they are likely to interrupt the audio stream resulting in dropouts, clicks and pops. Check the Processes tab to see which programs were hit.
Process with highest pagefault count: msmpeng.exe
Total number of hard pagefaults 6323
Hard pagefault count of hardest hit process: 6292
Highest hard pagefault resolution time (µs): 18637.537032
Total time spent in hard pagefaults (%): 0.059889
Number of processes hit: 10
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
PER CPU DATA
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 0 Interrupt cycle time (s): 29.855550
CPU 0 ISR highest execution time (µs): 101.586503
CPU 0 ISR total execution time (s): 10.020264
CPU 0 ISR count: 1800143
CPU 0 DPC highest execution time (µs): 306.614813
CPU 0 DPC total execution time (s): 14.818002
CPU 0 DPC count: 5679648
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 1 Interrupt cycle time (s): 9.159456
CPU 1 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR count: 0
CPU 1 DPC highest execution time (µs): 120.607378
CPU 1 DPC total execution time (s): 0.429315
CPU 1 DPC count: 106885
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 2 Interrupt cycle time (s): 8.205138
CPU 2 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR count: 0
CPU 2 DPC highest execution time (µs): 110.376894
CPU 2 DPC total execution time (s): 0.193156
CPU 2 DPC count: 93910
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 3 Interrupt cycle time (s): 4.054645
CPU 3 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR count: 0
CPU 3 DPC highest execution time (µs): 124.896769
CPU 3 DPC total execution time (s): 0.270494
CPU 3 DPC count: 116170
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CONCLUSION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Your system appears to be having trouble handling real-time audio and other tasks. You are likely to experience buffer underruns appearing as drop outs, clicks or pops. One problem may be related to power management, disable CPU throttling settings in Control Panel and BIOS setup. Check for BIOS updates.
LatencyMon has been analyzing your system for 0:11:54 (h:mm:ss) on all processors.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SYSTEM INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Computer name: CLASSIFIED
OS version: Windows 7 Service Pack 1, 6.1, build: 7601 (x64)
Hardware: All Series, ASUS, ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC., Z97-A
CPU: GenuineIntel Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4690 CPU @ 3.50GHz
Logical processors: 4
Processor groups: 1
RAM: 8133 MB total
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU SPEED
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Reported CPU speed: 3497.0 MHz
Measured CPU speed: 3666.0 MHz (approx.)
Note: reported execution times may be calculated based on a fixed reported CPU speed. Disable variable speed settings like Intel Speed Step and AMD Cool N Quiet in the BIOS setup for more accurate results.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
MEASURED INTERRUPT TO USER PROCESS LATENCIES
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The interrupt to process latency reflects the measured interval that a usermode process needed to respond to a hardware request from the moment the interrupt service routine started execution. This includes the scheduling and execution of a DPC routine, the signaling of an event and the waking up of a usermode thread from an idle wait state in response to that event.
Highest measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 8204.882004
Average measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 1.659171
Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 5021.055235
Average measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 0.605034
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED ISRs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interrupt service routines are routines installed by the OS and device drivers that execute in response to a hardware interrupt signal.
Highest ISR routine execution time (µs): 101.586503
Driver with highest ISR routine execution time: USBPORT.SYS - USB 1.1 & 2.0 Port Driver, Microsoft Corporation
Highest reported total ISR routine time (%): 0.277263
Driver with highest ISR total time: dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
Total time spent in ISRs (%) 0.350397
ISR count (execution time <250 µs): 1800143
ISR count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 500-999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED DPCs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
DPC routines are part of the interrupt servicing dispatch mechanism and disable the possibility for a process to utilize the CPU while it is interrupted until the DPC has finished execution.
Highest DPC routine execution time (µs): 306.614813
Driver with highest DPC routine execution time: nvlddmkm.sys - NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, Version 344.11 , NVIDIA Corporation
Highest reported total DPC routine time (%): 0.248724
Driver with highest DPC total execution time: iusb3xhc.sys - Intel(R) USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller Driver, Intel Corporation
Total time spent in DPCs (%) 0.549394
DPC count (execution time <250 µs): 5996608
DPC count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 500-999 µs): 5
DPC count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED HARD PAGEFAULTS
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Hard pagefaults are events that get triggered by making use of virtual memory that is not resident in RAM but backed by a memory mapped file on disk. The process of resolving the hard pagefault requires reading in the memory from disk while the process is interrupted and blocked from execution.
NOTE: some processes were hit by hard pagefaults. If these were programs producing audio, they are likely to interrupt the audio stream resulting in dropouts, clicks and pops. Check the Processes tab to see which programs were hit.
Process with highest pagefault count: msmpeng.exe
Total number of hard pagefaults 6323
Hard pagefault count of hardest hit process: 6292
Highest hard pagefault resolution time (µs): 18637.537032
Total time spent in hard pagefaults (%): 0.059889
Number of processes hit: 10
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
PER CPU DATA
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 0 Interrupt cycle time (s): 29.855550
CPU 0 ISR highest execution time (µs): 101.586503
CPU 0 ISR total execution time (s): 10.020264
CPU 0 ISR count: 1800143
CPU 0 DPC highest execution time (µs): 306.614813
CPU 0 DPC total execution time (s): 14.818002
CPU 0 DPC count: 5679648
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 1 Interrupt cycle time (s): 9.159456
CPU 1 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR count: 0
CPU 1 DPC highest execution time (µs): 120.607378
CPU 1 DPC total execution time (s): 0.429315
CPU 1 DPC count: 106885
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 2 Interrupt cycle time (s): 8.205138
CPU 2 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR count: 0
CPU 2 DPC highest execution time (µs): 110.376894
CPU 2 DPC total execution time (s): 0.193156
CPU 2 DPC count: 93910
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 3 Interrupt cycle time (s): 4.054645
CPU 3 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR count: 0
CPU 3 DPC highest execution time (µs): 124.896769
CPU 3 DPC total execution time (s): 0.270494
CPU 3 DPC count: 116170
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 1:21:57 PM
skit75 said:
NarbiusTheGreat said:
skit75 said:
NarbiusTheGreat said:
Installed Firewall, didn't fix the lag spikes. I tried changing some BIOS settings and my PC wouldn't start up (Stuck on the Asus logo screen, without having an option to go to bios.) Never trying that again, had to reset the CMOS battery.Ugh I just wish my PC problems were easy to solve. This is so annoying. I have been trying to fix it for months by now. Other people have simple problems, this? Ugh there is nothing showing it. Apparently LatencyMon shows that I have problems, but it doesn't tell me what is causing it.
The firewall shouldn't fix the spikes but I was hoping to prevent them upon install until you could allow it to happen knowing what caused it. If you are getting the spikes after a reboot with Comodo, it won't help you either, unfortunately.
Are you absolutely positive this is the same thing you are seeing on your laptop? Does LatMon give a report code? More importantly, does LatMon give you the same report on your laptop as it does on your PC?
Sorry, got lighted up after completely becoming stupid when I was talking with an EVGA employee over the phone. Apparently one of my motherboards pcie graphics card slots doesn't work. Weird. Well. Fixed something, but still didn't check the lag spikes. Be back soon.
Well, that still wouldn't fix your laptop..... Changing or fixing a piece of hardware on your PC won't fix your laptop spikes. I am beginning to think this isn't an issue.
Hm... The thing is it doesn't happen on my brother's laptop. That is the big problem. I am going to probably return the motherboard to Asus for a new one in hopes that the new one works better.
Sorry I am barely answering your questions. I am gonna go and check my HP laptop's latency spikes to see if it is different.
Here is the error report on my PC:
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CONCLUSION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Your system appears to be having trouble handling real-time audio and other tasks. You are likely to experience buffer underruns appearing as drop outs, clicks or pops. One problem may be related to power management, disable CPU throttling settings in Control Panel and BIOS setup. Check for BIOS updates.
LatencyMon has been analyzing your system for 0:02:05 (h:mm:ss) on all processors.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
SYSTEM INFORMATION
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Computer name: CLASSIFIED
OS version: Windows 7 Service Pack 1, 6.1, build: 7601 (x64)
Hardware: All Series, ASUS, ASUSTeK COMPUTER INC., Z97-A
CPU: GenuineIntel Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-4690 CPU @ 3.50GHz
Logical processors: 4
Processor groups: 1
RAM: 8133 MB total
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU SPEED
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Reported CPU speed: 3500.0 MHz
Measured CPU speed: 4087.0 MHz (approx.)
Note: reported execution times may be calculated based on a fixed reported CPU speed. Disable variable speed settings like Intel Speed Step and AMD Cool N Quiet in the BIOS setup for more accurate results.
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
MEASURED INTERRUPT TO USER PROCESS LATENCIES
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
The interrupt to process latency reflects the measured interval that a usermode process needed to respond to a hardware request from the moment the interrupt service routine started execution. This includes the scheduling and execution of a DPC routine, the signaling of an event and the waking up of a usermode thread from an idle wait state in response to that event.
Highest measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 6969.889888
Average measured interrupt to process latency (µs): 1.703553
Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 160.328240
Average measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs): 0.477719
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED ISRs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Interrupt service routines are routines installed by the OS and device drivers that execute in response to a hardware interrupt signal.
Highest ISR routine execution time (µs): 103.3780
Driver with highest ISR routine execution time: dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
Highest reported total ISR routine time (%): 0.211413
Driver with highest ISR total time: dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
Total time spent in ISRs (%) 0.277075
ISR count (execution time <250 µs): 351633
ISR count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 500-999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
ISR count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED DPCs
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
DPC routines are part of the interrupt servicing dispatch mechanism and disable the possibility for a process to utilize the CPU while it is interrupted until the DPC has finished execution.
Highest DPC routine execution time (µs): 321.613714
Driver with highest DPC routine execution time: nvlddmkm.sys - NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, Version 337.88 , NVIDIA Corporation
Highest reported total DPC routine time (%): 0.271616
Driver with highest DPC total execution time: iusb3xhc.sys - Intel(R) USB 3.0 eXtensible Host Controller Driver, Intel Corporation
Total time spent in DPCs (%) 0.543250
DPC count (execution time <250 µs): 1126104
DPC count (execution time 250-500 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 500-999 µs): 16
DPC count (execution time 1000-1999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time 2000-3999 µs): 0
DPC count (execution time >=4000 µs): 0
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
REPORTED HARD PAGEFAULTS
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Hard pagefaults are events that get triggered by making use of virtual memory that is not resident in RAM but backed by a memory mapped file on disk. The process of resolving the hard pagefault requires reading in the memory from disk while the process is interrupted and blocked from execution.
NOTE: some processes were hit by hard pagefaults. If these were programs producing audio, they are likely to interrupt the audio stream resulting in dropouts, clicks and pops. Check the Processes tab to see which programs were hit.
Process with highest pagefault count: msmpeng.exe
Total number of hard pagefaults 1269
Hard pagefault count of hardest hit process: 1256
Highest hard pagefault resolution time (µs): 8687.884286
Total time spent in hard pagefaults (%): 0.048432
Number of processes hit: 4
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
PER CPU DATA
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 0 Interrupt cycle time (s): 4.510567
CPU 0 ISR highest execution time (µs): 103.3780
CPU 0 ISR total execution time (s): 1.394065
CPU 0 ISR count: 351633
CPU 0 DPC highest execution time (µs): 321.613714
CPU 0 DPC total execution time (s): 2.600647
CPU 0 DPC count: 1075097
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 1 Interrupt cycle time (s): 0.583872
CPU 1 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 1 ISR count: 0
CPU 1 DPC highest execution time (µs): 100.046857
CPU 1 DPC total execution time (s): 0.050859
CPU 1 DPC count: 15224
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 2 Interrupt cycle time (s): 0.400952
CPU 2 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 2 ISR count: 0
CPU 2 DPC highest execution time (µs): 103.311429
CPU 2 DPC total execution time (s): 0.044957
CPU 2 DPC count: 17788
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
CPU 3 Interrupt cycle time (s): 0.380293
CPU 3 ISR highest execution time (µs): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR total execution time (s): 0.0
CPU 3 ISR count: 0
CPU 3 DPC highest execution time (µs): 250.1480
CPU 3 DPC total execution time (s): 0.036824
CPU 3 DPC count: 18011
_________________________________________________________________________________________________________
That is fairly old. Gonna do a new one.
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 12:52:25 PM
Alright. Here is something. The lag spikes are still here. But at a lesser amount? Guess adding the GPU into a different slot fixed it a bit, but right now, Asus. I am coming for you Asus. This is Asus's fault all along, and I know it. This is going to take a while to RMA (It's Asus, they have bad customer service I heard, plus when I called them they said they would email me after a long call with them. No email.) Not calling now because... well still testing this, plus it is the weekend. Hopefully I can solve this issue with replacing the motherboard, and then never have to come back here for this issue again! Thanks so much for all the replies!
skit75
October 17, 2014 12:31:20 PM
NarbiusTheGreat said:
skit75 said:
NarbiusTheGreat said:
Installed Firewall, didn't fix the lag spikes. I tried changing some BIOS settings and my PC wouldn't start up (Stuck on the Asus logo screen, without having an option to go to bios.) Never trying that again, had to reset the CMOS battery.Ugh I just wish my PC problems were easy to solve. This is so annoying. I have been trying to fix it for months by now. Other people have simple problems, this? Ugh there is nothing showing it. Apparently LatencyMon shows that I have problems, but it doesn't tell me what is causing it.
The firewall shouldn't fix the spikes but I was hoping to prevent them upon install until you could allow it to happen knowing what caused it. If you are getting the spikes after a reboot with Comodo, it won't help you either, unfortunately.
Are you absolutely positive this is the same thing you are seeing on your laptop? Does LatMon give a report code? More importantly, does LatMon give you the same report on your laptop as it does on your PC?
Sorry, got lighted up after completely becoming stupid when I was talking with an EVGA employee over the phone. Apparently one of my motherboards pcie graphics card slots doesn't work. Weird. Well. Fixed something, but still didn't check the lag spikes. Be back soon.
Well, that still wouldn't fix your laptop..... Changing or fixing a piece of hardware on your PC won't fix your laptop spikes. I am beginning to think this isn't an issue.
NarbiusTheGreat
October 17, 2014 12:21:37 PM
skit75 said:
NarbiusTheGreat said:
Installed Firewall, didn't fix the lag spikes. I tried changing some BIOS settings and my PC wouldn't start up (Stuck on the Asus logo screen, without having an option to go to bios.) Never trying that again, had to reset the CMOS battery.Ugh I just wish my PC problems were easy to solve. This is so annoying. I have been trying to fix it for months by now. Other people have simple problems, this? Ugh there is nothing showing it. Apparently LatencyMon shows that I have problems, but it doesn't tell me what is causing it.
The firewall shouldn't fix the spikes but I was hoping to prevent them upon install until you could allow it to happen knowing what caused it. If you are getting the spikes after a reboot with Comodo, it won't help you either, unfortunately.
Are you absolutely positive this is the same thing you are seeing on your laptop? Does LatMon give a report code? More importantly, does LatMon give you the same report on your laptop as it does on your PC?
Sorry, got lighted up after completely becoming stupid when I was talking with an EVGA employee over the phone. Apparently one of my motherboards pcie graphics card slots doesn't work. Weird. Well. Fixed something, but still didn't check the lag spikes. Be back soon.
skit75
October 16, 2014 4:27:52 PM
NarbiusTheGreat said:
Installed Firewall, didn't fix the lag spikes. I tried changing some BIOS settings and my PC wouldn't start up (Stuck on the Asus logo screen, without having an option to go to bios.) Never trying that again, had to reset the CMOS battery.Ugh I just wish my PC problems were easy to solve. This is so annoying. I have been trying to fix it for months by now. Other people have simple problems, this? Ugh there is nothing showing it. Apparently LatencyMon shows that I have problems, but it doesn't tell me what is causing it.
The firewall shouldn't fix the spikes but I was hoping to prevent them upon install until you could allow it to happen knowing what caused it. If you are getting the spikes after a reboot with Comodo, it won't help you either, unfortunately.
Are you absolutely positive this is the same thing you are seeing on your laptop? Does LatMon give a report code? More importantly, does LatMon give you the same report on your laptop as it does on your PC?
See all answers