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翻訳の問題を報告
They compress rather than page out.
How much ram do you have?
I will guess its a kernel value in the registry.
You could install regmon and monitor the registry reads for values that are either there or MISSING (indicating a DEFAULT value in the kernel) then add /modify the registry key.
http://www.thewindowsclub.com/memory-compression-in-windows-10
It is better to have it compressed than paged out. Nowdays we have 16gb+ in laptops so memory is not an issue, it is better to USE this memory than to have it IDLE doing nothing, memory is supost to be used.
How do you know it is slowing down your games?
You COULD boost the priority of your game to ABOVE NORMAL (but not higher and DEFINATLY not real time), but keep in mind DirectX is not pre-emptive in nature it is co-operative. Lot's of games modify their process priority for foreground and background focusing (as does the NT Kernel for quanta boosting).
Linux can do the same. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zram
If you're on an SSD, whilst it's fast paging could reduce the WLC (Wear Levelling Count) but only if you're paging lots (then you have a low memory problem and I suggest you add more :) ), but WLC is not a problem generally unless you're writing out 150-300 TB.
OS X also has memory compression, since 10.9 Maveriks I believe.
What is the point of the ram if it's not being used?
The last thing you want to do is swap out. I think you should look at your machine specs first.
Memory compression is here to stay no matter which OS platform you are on, like it not, add more ram is best in every scenario :)
that greatly increases the cpu load while creating more space on the drive
as data is compressed/uncrompressed during drive read and writes
info
http://www.howtogeek.com/133264/how-to-use-ntfs-compression-and-when-you-might-want-to/
to disable
http://www.technipages.com/disable-windows-file-compression
This is memory compression as a precursor to paging out to disk when there is low memory.
I think he has probably 4gb and running low therefore to prevent paging all OS's now compress the memory since it is faster than paging out to disk and back.
Everybody has RAM, then they cry that it's actually being used by modern OS kernels.
I remember when everybody complained about the SYSTEM IDLE process in WIndows taking up 99% CPU time.
If you have a memory problem, get more. That's what it sounds like to me, you have a low memory machine and it's struggling, so it's trying to compensate in the best way it knows.
The machine is underpecified for the use.
It is actually more optimal to keep memory allocated than to keep freeing it up, only free it up when necessary (i.e., a memory allocation request comes in), saves CPU, and in the case of runtimes that garbage collect, also saves resurection times (that is what the .NET runtime does).
What is the point of memory if it is sitting EMPTY? All components of a system should be working in the best interest of the OS. That is the OS's job.
Messing with Kernel registry keys to fix a HARDWARE problem, is not a good idea.
I Googled around for a kernel registry key to modify it but cannot find it, I dont have W10 here to check for the key. if you really want, that is how to do it, that I am very sure off, the kernel also reads settings from the registry.
Areas to check in the registry are under
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager
I think, been a while since I tinkered with the kernel.
So feel free to stick regmon on it https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896645
Please... let us know if this fixes your hardware low-spec problem.
It shouldn't impact performance really. RAM compression is done only when RAM is nearly full and the compression method is over and done with in a matter of seconds. Only repeating as needed.
You can do this manually on older WinOS too, using tools like IObit supplies for free, either through Advanced SystemCare or IObit Toolbox; their tool is called SmartRAM; and allows you to compress and free up vital RAM as needed.
In most cases all it does is free up un-used RAM blocks that go un-checked after data is actually freed up. Then put through a quick defrag method. Again very useful actually.
Actually it is if your game is about to eat the last bit of free RAM u have. Having the memory mangement do it's thing and keep the game from moving data in/out of the PageFile area actually helps. Now because u are playing a game that is using high loads of CPU & GPU; it may impact performance, but it should be very brief, then greatly improve.
No one forcing folks to use Win10 either.
Less than 8GB RAM? Get more.
You won't see that 1.5GB as a process; that is the Core OS using that. You can't really make it use less. Plus over time the OS makes using of "caching" which again is a need. If you completely free every last bits of RAM; everything will actually load longer to load due to an empty cache.
Many also never change their Virtual Memory / Page File settings; as a WinOS user, learn to do this. Windows by default sets this way too high, often resulting in poor performance (depending on your total physical RAM). Remove the PageFile by setting it to None, Apply and reboot when asked. Then reset the PageFile to a smaller, but same Min & Max # (such as 2048 for 2GB or 4096 for 4GB; super low is not a good idea, and super high is a waste). With the min & max the same, your system won't be changing the size the temp PageFile uses with regards to physical disk space over time, resulting in better system performance and less disk fragmentations.
The core OS will use roughly 2GB right off the bat; that is pretty much a given.
You still can, if you install it.
Or, just install Linux Mint with MATE if you really want low hardware requirements.
I don't see the issues however; by the time u were using Vista or Win7 u should have already had around 6 - 8 GB of RAM. With that and beyond, u won't have RAM issues in Windows.
Most Windows 7 sales came with 4gb as normal. Only since 8/10 did they start shipping 6gb as minimum really.
If you're on a laptop, Always ALWAYS max out ram when you get it or very soon after before the ram format changes and production changes and prices rocket for older production runs (I have this issue now with an 5 year old laptop, SODIMM changed pin counts and its now 2½x the original price per stick :) ), now I MAX out memory on purchase. I only use laptops (unless it's a server or turn key appliance device).
With I could add memory compression to Windows 7, but Linux has it as zRam so I will use that, even though I set swappiness to very low (10 i think), since I have plenty (lol) or ram.
And 5yr old laptops still use DDR3 SO-DIMM unless you purchased something that was already outdated back then at time of purchase. DDR3 is cheap right now. DDR3 and DDR4 are on sale all throughout the holidays sales.
If you are struggling on a low ram machine, and cannot upgrade it, switch to Linux Mint and MATE / Cinnamon and use Steam on that, until you can upgrade to a new machine (and keep that old one for Linux or disect it for parts (HDD/RAM/GPU/CPU/Screen/KB to reuse or sell).
4GB ram on a desktop is shockingly low, on a laptop even so (I have 16gb on my laptop and I find that low).
Memory is cheap as is storage, get it whilst it's low, unlessyou really need a MAJOR upgrade of hardware.
https://uk.pcpartpicker.com/trends/price/memory/
I don't recommend setting the pagefile to none if you have LOW ram, you can do this if you have a low lilkihood of paging on high ram systems, on a low ram machine there is a HIGH likelihood of pagin (as he is seeing), so DO NOT turn off paging, you either get an exception (out of memory exception) and a user mode crash if you're lucky, worst case, kernel mode crash (BSOD) depending on what causes the allocation fault. Default settings are fine for the page file, that is not his problem, he is complaining because "new windows 10 feature" he read about that makes use of memory that he thinks should be ZERO use, it's a "CHANGE" thing, and "CHANGE" is bad especially for WINDOWS users for some reason.
DDR2 SODIMM's (200pin instead of 204 pin I think) but they're expensive now due to lower production runs (Ferrari One F200 netbook - circa 2009/10 production), I wanted to stick 8gb in it, it's at 4gb now (even though it's not documented but it can apparently run 8GB :) ), so I am switching it to Linux (added SSD's and it's still blisteringly fast) just as a run about netbook (great for this purpose instaed of hauling a 15" gamer laptop about) and not as limited as a nose-touch tablet.
So, to extend the useful life of a laptop/netbook (assuming it was useful in the first place and not integrated gfx or single core ATOM rubbish).
1) SSD - amazing fast boot times and responsiveness (Samsung 850 EVO on cheaper hardware, PRO on main power use and younger hardware).
2) More ram - always useful (whatever fits)
3) Linux - lower resource requirements and faster response (Mint Cinnamon).
Each of these steps can add a few years onto the hardware usefullness easily. I have gotten 10/11 years out of a laptop, this netbook is 5 years going on 6 and still very strong.