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Guided Help to set performance options in Windows XP
Guided Help is available to set performance options in Windows XP. Guided Help can guide you through the steps or Guided Help can automatically perform the steps for you.
The actions that this Guided Help performs can be undone after Guided Help is finished. To undo the actions that this Guided Help performs, run Guided Help again, and then select your previous performance settings.
For more information about Guided Help, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
915092
Description of Guided Help for Microsoft Knowledge Base articles
Requirements to install and to use this Guided Help
- You must be logged on to Windows by using a computer administrator account to install and to use this Guided Help.
- You must be running Windows XP Home Edition, Windows XP Professional, Windows XP Media Center Edition, or Windows XP Tablet PC Edition to install and to use this Guided Help.
You must first download Guided Help. To start, click the following link.
Download Guided HelpManual steps to set performance options in Windows XP
How to manually manage processor time
Windows manages system processing. Windows can allocate tasks
between processors and manage multiple processes on a single processor.
However, you can set Windows to allocate more processor time to the program
that you are currently running. The added processor time causes programs to
respond more quickly. Or, if you have background programs such as printing or
disk backup that you want to run while you work, you can have Windows share
processor resources equally between background and foreground programs.
Note You must be logged on as an administrator to the local computer
or have the correct network credentials to make certain changes in System.
Back to the topHow to manually change the performance of foreground and background programs
- Click Start, click Run,
and then type sysdm.cpl in the Open
box.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then click Settings under Performance.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then use one of the following methods under
Processor scheduling:
- Click Programs to assign more processor resources to the foreground program than
the background program.
- Click Background services to assign
equal amounts of processor resources to all programs.
Notes- If you click Programs, the foreground program runs more smoothly and responds more
quickly. If you want a background task such as a Backup utility to run faster,
click Background services.
- The Programs option allocates short, variable time slices (quanta) to running
programs, and the Background services option assigns long,
fixed quanta.
Back to the topHow to manually manage computer memory
When your computer is running low on RAM, and you must have more
RAM immediately, Windows uses hard disk space to simulate RAM. This is known as
virtual memory. It is also known as the paging file. This is similar to the
UNIX swapfile. By default, the virtual memory paging file (named pagefile.sys)
that is created during installation is 1.5 times the RAM on your computer.
You can optimize virtual memory use by dividing the space between
multiple drives and by removing space from slow or heavily accessed drives. To
best optimize your virtual memory space, divide it among as many physical hard
drives as possible. When you select drives, follow these guidelines:
- Try to avoid having a paging file on the same drive as the
system files.
- Avoid putting a paging file on a fault-tolerant drive such
as a mirrored volume or a RAID-5 volume. Paging files do not require
fault-tolerance, and some fault-tolerant computers experience slow data writes
because they write data to multiple locations.
- Do not put multiple paging files on different partitions on
the same physical disk drive.
Back to the topHow to manually change the size of the virtual memory paging file You must be logged on as an administrator or as a member of the
Administrators group to complete this procedure. If your computer is connected
to a network, network policy settings may also prevent you from completing this
procedure.
- Click Start, click Run,
and then type sysdm.cpl in the Open
box.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then click Settings under Performance.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then click Change under Virtual memory.
- Under Drive [Volume Label], click the drive that contains the paging file that you want to
change.
- Under Paging file size for selected drive,
click Custom size, type a new paging file size in megabytes
(MB) in the Initial size (MB) or Maximum size
(MB) box, and then click Set.
If you decrease the size of either the initial or maximum
paging file settings, you must restart your computer to see the effects of
those changes. When you increase the paging file size, you typically do not
have to restart your computer.
Notes- To have Windows select the best paging file size, click
System managed size. The recommended minimum size is
equivalent to 1.5 times the RAM on your computer, and 3 times that figure for
the maximum size. For example, if you have 256 MB of RAM, the minimum size is
384 MB, and the maximum size is 1152 MB.
- For best performance, do not set the initial size to less
than the minimum recommended size under Total paging file size for all
drives. The recommended size is equivalent to 1.5 times the RAM on
your computer. It is good practice to leave the paging file at its recommended
size. However, you may increase its size if you frequently use programs that
use much memory.
- To delete a paging file, set both the initial size and the
maximum size to zero, or click No paging file. We strongly recommend that you do not disable or delete the
paging file.
Back to the topHow to manually optimize the memory usage You can optimize your computer's memory usage. If you use your
computer primarily as a workstation instead of as a server, you can devote more
memory to your programs. Your programs will work faster and your system cache
size will remain the default size that came with Windows XP. You can also set
aside more computer memory for a larger system cache if your computer is used
primarily as a server, or if you use programs that require a larger cache.
- Click Start, click Run,
and then type sysdm.cpl in the Open
box.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then click Settings under Performance.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then use one of the following methods under
Memory usage:
- Click Programs if you use your computer primarily as a workstation instead of as
a server. This option allocates more memory to your programs.
- Click System cache if your computer is
used primarily as a server or if you use programs that use a larger
cache.
Back to the topHow to manually change the visual effects
Windows provides several options to set the visual effects of
your computer. For example, you can show shadows under menus. Shadows give
menus a 3-D look. You can configure Windows to display all the contents of a
window while you move the window on your screen. To make large text more
readable, you can display the smooth edges of screen fonts.
Windows
provides options to turn on all the settings (for best appearance), or none of
the settings (for best computer performance). You can also restore the default
settings.
To change the visual effects, follow these steps:
- Click Start, click Run,
and then type sysdm.cpl in the Open
box.
- Click the Advanced tab, and then under Performance, click Settings.
- Click the Visual Effects tab, and then use one of the following methods:
- Click Adjust for best performance to
have Windows automatically adjust the settings for best performance.
- Click Adjust for best appearance to
have Windows automatically adjust the settings for best appearance.
- Click Custom, and then select the check boxes for those items that you want to
turn on. Clear the check boxes for the items that you want to turn off.
Back to the topGlossary
background program A background program is a program that runs while the user is
working on another task. The computer's microprocessor assigns fewer resources
to background programs than to foreground programs.
environment variable An environment variable is a string of environment information
such as a drive, path, or file name that is associated with a symbolic name
that Windows can use. You use System in Control Panel or the
set command at the command prompt to define environment
variables.
foreground program A foreground program is a program that runs in the active window
(the upper-most window with the highlighted title bar). The foreground program
responds to commands that the user issues.
mirrored volume A mirrored volume is a fault-tolerant volume that duplicates data
on two physical disks. A mirrored volume provides data redundancy by using two
identical volumes. These volumes are known as mirrors. They duplicate the
information that the volume contains. A mirror is always located on a different
disk. If one of the physical disks fails, the data on the failed disk becomes
unavailable, but the system continues to operate in the mirror on the remaining
disk. You can create mirrored volumes only on dynamic disks.
partition A partition is part of a physical disk that functions as if it
were a physically separate disk. After you create a partition, you must format
it and assign it a drive letter before you can store data on it. On basic
disks, partitions are known as basic volumes. Basic volumes include primary
partitions and logical drives. On dynamic disks, partitions are known as
dynamic volumes. Dynamic volumes include simple, striped, spanned, mirrored,
and RAID-5 volumes.
RAID-5 volume A RAID-5 volume is a fault-tolerant volume with data and parity
striped intermittently across three or more physical disks. Parity is a
calculated value that is used to reconstruct data after a failure. If a part of
a physical disk fails, Windows recreates the data that was on the failed part
from the remaining data and parity. You can create RAID-5 volumes only on
dynamic disks, and you cannot mirror or extend RAID-5
volumes.
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