How to see real ram usage for each program in windows 7












-1















when i press ctrl-alt-del and open Task manager I see that Memory is used at 80% (Performance tab), but if I add all the memory usage values for each program from the Processes tabs there's no way it adds up to 80% ! How can I see the real memory usage for each app?



PS: I found that view... select columns let's me show more data. So I checked all memory columns and the only one that could reach that 80% value is "Peak working set". There the values are much higher and I see a huge 2.5 GB usage from "svchost". But svchost is some kind of library, how can I see what program makes it use so much?



Here's a screenshot to see what I mean:



Task Manager



Total RAM is 8 GB and usage is always at 6 GB +



PPS:



closing virtualbox freed a lot of RAM, down to 50%, but why doesn't the virtualbox real ram usage show up in task manager?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

    – Frank Thomas
    Jan 21 '16 at 3:21








  • 1





    Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 21 '16 at 5:53











  • is your question answered? Do you need more help?

    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '16 at 8:20
















-1















when i press ctrl-alt-del and open Task manager I see that Memory is used at 80% (Performance tab), but if I add all the memory usage values for each program from the Processes tabs there's no way it adds up to 80% ! How can I see the real memory usage for each app?



PS: I found that view... select columns let's me show more data. So I checked all memory columns and the only one that could reach that 80% value is "Peak working set". There the values are much higher and I see a huge 2.5 GB usage from "svchost". But svchost is some kind of library, how can I see what program makes it use so much?



Here's a screenshot to see what I mean:



Task Manager



Total RAM is 8 GB and usage is always at 6 GB +



PPS:



closing virtualbox freed a lot of RAM, down to 50%, but why doesn't the virtualbox real ram usage show up in task manager?










share|improve this question




















  • 2





    I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

    – Frank Thomas
    Jan 21 '16 at 3:21








  • 1





    Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 21 '16 at 5:53











  • is your question answered? Do you need more help?

    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '16 at 8:20














-1












-1








-1








when i press ctrl-alt-del and open Task manager I see that Memory is used at 80% (Performance tab), but if I add all the memory usage values for each program from the Processes tabs there's no way it adds up to 80% ! How can I see the real memory usage for each app?



PS: I found that view... select columns let's me show more data. So I checked all memory columns and the only one that could reach that 80% value is "Peak working set". There the values are much higher and I see a huge 2.5 GB usage from "svchost". But svchost is some kind of library, how can I see what program makes it use so much?



Here's a screenshot to see what I mean:



Task Manager



Total RAM is 8 GB and usage is always at 6 GB +



PPS:



closing virtualbox freed a lot of RAM, down to 50%, but why doesn't the virtualbox real ram usage show up in task manager?










share|improve this question
















when i press ctrl-alt-del and open Task manager I see that Memory is used at 80% (Performance tab), but if I add all the memory usage values for each program from the Processes tabs there's no way it adds up to 80% ! How can I see the real memory usage for each app?



PS: I found that view... select columns let's me show more data. So I checked all memory columns and the only one that could reach that 80% value is "Peak working set". There the values are much higher and I see a huge 2.5 GB usage from "svchost". But svchost is some kind of library, how can I see what program makes it use so much?



Here's a screenshot to see what I mean:



Task Manager



Total RAM is 8 GB and usage is always at 6 GB +



PPS:



closing virtualbox freed a lot of RAM, down to 50%, but why doesn't the virtualbox real ram usage show up in task manager?







windows-7 memory 64-bit task-manager






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edited Jan 21 '16 at 5:23









magicandre1981

81.9k20126204




81.9k20126204










asked Jan 21 '16 at 3:16









ktiektie

113




113








  • 2





    I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

    – Frank Thomas
    Jan 21 '16 at 3:21








  • 1





    Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 21 '16 at 5:53











  • is your question answered? Do you need more help?

    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '16 at 8:20














  • 2





    I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

    – Frank Thomas
    Jan 21 '16 at 3:21








  • 1





    Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

    – Daniel B
    Jan 21 '16 at 5:53











  • is your question answered? Do you need more help?

    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '16 at 8:20








2




2





I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

– Frank Thomas
Jan 21 '16 at 3:21







I use Process Explorer from Microsoft. To measure ACTUAL usage of physical ram, look at the Private Working Set (aka WS Private) metric. you will have to add a column to see it in the main grid. See my comments here for a description of what the different memory statuses measure: superuser.com/questions/618686/…

– Frank Thomas
Jan 21 '16 at 3:21






1




1





Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

– Daniel B
Jan 21 '16 at 5:53





Peak Working Set is the highest value used during the process lifetime. So it's most likely not what you're looking for.

– Daniel B
Jan 21 '16 at 5:53













is your question answered? Do you need more help?

– magicandre1981
Jan 30 '16 at 8:20





is your question answered? Do you need more help?

– magicandre1981
Jan 30 '16 at 8:20










1 Answer
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The svchost.exe is a container to start Windows services. Windows 7 has a bug, which causes a large memory usage of the WindowsUpdate service. Microsoft fixed it in several Windows Update Client updates. Install the latest one from December 2015 to fix the memory usage.



For a detailed memory usage overview, always use RAMMap.






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    The svchost.exe is a container to start Windows services. Windows 7 has a bug, which causes a large memory usage of the WindowsUpdate service. Microsoft fixed it in several Windows Update Client updates. Install the latest one from December 2015 to fix the memory usage.



    For a detailed memory usage overview, always use RAMMap.






    share|improve this answer




























      0














      The svchost.exe is a container to start Windows services. Windows 7 has a bug, which causes a large memory usage of the WindowsUpdate service. Microsoft fixed it in several Windows Update Client updates. Install the latest one from December 2015 to fix the memory usage.



      For a detailed memory usage overview, always use RAMMap.






      share|improve this answer


























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        0








        0







        The svchost.exe is a container to start Windows services. Windows 7 has a bug, which causes a large memory usage of the WindowsUpdate service. Microsoft fixed it in several Windows Update Client updates. Install the latest one from December 2015 to fix the memory usage.



        For a detailed memory usage overview, always use RAMMap.






        share|improve this answer













        The svchost.exe is a container to start Windows services. Windows 7 has a bug, which causes a large memory usage of the WindowsUpdate service. Microsoft fixed it in several Windows Update Client updates. Install the latest one from December 2015 to fix the memory usage.



        For a detailed memory usage overview, always use RAMMap.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jan 21 '16 at 5:27









        magicandre1981magicandre1981

        81.9k20126204




        81.9k20126204






























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