You can use any antivirus software to scan your computer and remove any viruses on your Windows computer. After scanning your computer and getting rid of any viruses or malware, restart your computer and check to see if the problem still exists. However, this problem is commonly caused by a virus or malware infection or because of a single service automatically starting to use up all the network and memory on your computer. All of the solutions mentioned in this guide are highly recommended for those computer systems suffering from a svchost.
Go through the solutions and try them and see if these are the fixes you have been looking for. Petr Kudlacek. Desktop Window Manager dwm. A lot of Windows users are complaining about dwm.
If you are…. What is COM Surrogate? I don't know what it is downloading but whatever it is, it's really huge It sucks around megabytes everyday. If I try to end this task, I'm not able to use any internet related app at all. I don't know what it is, but can't be a malware. Guys if anyone know what this is and how to fix this thing please help me cause' I'm falling short on my bandwidth. Open Process Explorer and click View on the menu bar. From the drop down menu click Select Columns and then the Process Image tab.
Place the cursor on the svchost process generating the CPU activity, right click, select Properties and the Service. You can Stop and Restart any service from that window by placing the cursor on the service and clicking the appropriate button. You can see what impact it has on CPU usage. Before stopping any service read the summary describing the service so that you have a better understanding of the implications of stopping the service. Place the cursor on the svchost process showing the high CPU activity, right click and select Properties.
Click the Services tab and you will see a list of services that use the process. The command line is displayed as a column in the main Process Explorer window if it has been selected as a View option but if you click the Image tab for the selected process it is also detailed there.
The services numbered , , and relate to Windows Update. I cannot tell if these are causing the activity you complain about but they will regularly generate activity through this process.
Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Not sure but same was for me. It was actually syncing for me the settings as well as some onedrive data i guess. I stopped the ' Background Intelligent Transfer Service ' and it worked.
There was no unwanted data usage after that. But, since you told that this service is related to windows update, I'm not sure if it's good idea to manipulate it. Moreover, I have reserved my copy of Windows 10 it hasn't started downloading yet so just wanted to ask if it's fine to stop it without hampering my copy of Windows My OS windows 8. It would be sensible to check your service settings as you should not run the computer with the Background Intelligent Transfer Service ' disabled. The first method is to create an isolated process that runs within the same SVCHOST group as it did before, just not in a shared process.
Since we've been using Windows Updates as our example, let's continue on with that. What this method really does is modify one of the registry parameters for the service in question from a shared process to an isolated process.
In order to complete the change, you need to stop and restart the service. For this change to complete, the machine itself needs to be rebooted. No other parameters are being modified with respect to this service, however when you change the type to isolated, restart the service and then run the tasklist command to get the list of services, you will notice that there is an SVCHOST.
EXE process that only contains the Windows Update service. This method is a bit more involved, and involves directly editing the registry. Please remember to back up the registry before making any changes!
0コメント