NB205 - DPC Latency is Horrible

Just another annoying thing about this laptop.  Use a DPC Latency checker, it spikes to red and yellow quite often.  Seriously can Toshiba do anything right?

the Wlan-card was it. How can i solve the problem that i can use my wlan without this freeze problems ?

Similar Messages

  • ZBook 17 g2 - poor DPC Latency performance when running from z Turbo Drive PCIe SSD

    I'm setting up a new zBook 17 g2 and am getting very poor DPC latency performance (> 6000 us) when running from the PCIe SSD. I've re-installed the OS (Win 7 64 bit) on both the PCIe SSD and a SATA HDD and the DPC latency performance is fine when running from the HDD (50 - 100 us) but horrible when running from the PCIe SSD (> 6000 us).  I've updated the BIOS and tried every combination of driver and component enabling/disabling I can think of.  The DPC latency is extremely high from the initial Windows install with no drivers installed.  Adding drivers seems to have no effect on the DPC latency. Before purchasing the laptop I found this review: http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-HP-ZBook-17-E9X11AA-ABA-Workstation.106222.0.html where the DPC latency measurement (middle of the page) looks OK.  Of course, this is the prior version of the laptop and I believe it does not have the PCIe SSD.  Combining that with the fact that I get fine performance when running from the HDD I am led to believe that the PCIe SSD is the cause of the problem. Has anyone found a solution to this problem?  As it stands right now my zBook is not usable for digital audio work when running from the PCIe SSD.  But it cost me a lot of money so I'd sure like to use it...! Thanks, rgames

    Hi mooktank, No solution yet but, as of about six weeks ago, HP at least acknowledged that it's a problem (finally).  I reproduced it perfectly on another zBook 17 g2 and another PCIe SSD in the same laptop and HP was able to reproduce the problem as well.  So the problem is clearly in the BIOS or with some driver related to the PCIe SSD.  It could also be with the firmware in the drive, itself, but I can't find any other PCIe drives in the 60 mm form factor.  So there's no way to see if a differnt type of drive would fix the problem. My suspicion is that it's related to the PCIe sleep states - those are known to cause exactly these types of problems because the drive takes quick "naps" to save power and there's a delay when it is told to wake back up.  That delay causes a delay in the audio buffer that results in pops/crackles/stutters that would never be noticed doing other tasks like video editing or CAD work .  So it's a problem specific to folks who need low-latency audio performance (very few apps require low latency audio - video editing, for example, uses huge buffers with relatively high latency).  A lot of desktops offer a BIOS option to disable those sleep states but no such option exists in HP's BIOS for that laptop.  In theory you can do it from within Windows but it doesn't have an effect on my system.  That might be one of those options that Windows allows you to change but that actually has no effect. One workaround is to disable CPU throttling.  That makes the CPU run at full speed all the time and, I believe, also disables the PCIe and other sleep states.  When I disable CPU throttling, DPC latency goes back to normal.  However, the CPU is then running full-speed all the time so your battery life basically goes to nothing and the laptop gets *very* hot. Clearly that is not necessary because the laptop runs fine from the SATA SSD.  HP needs to fix the latency problem associated with the PCIe drive. The next logical step is to provide a BIOS update that provides a way to disable the PCIe sleep states without disabling CPU throttling, like on many desktop systems.  The bad news is that HP tech support is not very technical, so it takes forever for them to figure out what I'm talking about.  It took a couple months for them to start using the DPC Latency checker. Hopefully there will be a fix at some point... in the meantime, I hope that HP sends me a check for spending so much time educating their techs on how computers work.  And for countless hours lost re-installing different OSes only to show that the performance is exactly the same as shown in the DPC Latency checker. rgames

  • DPC latency + audio/mouse skip and stutter on t420s

    Hello fellow thinkpad owners,
    I have a new t420s (41717FU) core i7, 8GB RAM, and NVS 4200M discrete, win 7 64-bit pro.  I use the minidock with 2 external 28" displays on DVI out.  
    I discovered major issues with latency with this machine; very noticeable loss of control for about half a second, plus annoying audio stutter, especially concurrent with network activity. This is quite frustrating, especially for a machine that is supposed to be high end core i7 with discrete graphics. I had a t410s previously and also had latency problems, and I know this is a real problem with several different models (just search 'annoying audio') on the forums.
    I have used dpc latency checker as well as latency mon and narrowed the probable culprit to the network drivers associated with the gigabit ethernet.  It took me a while to discover the relationship to the Intel 82579LM, since LatencyMon will identify the problem with NDIS.sys or NETIO.sys, giving sporadic latencies over 20000 microsecs, which made me think it was a Win 7 tcp stack issue or maybe some internal windows firewall blocking.  During these spikes, the audio stutters, the mouse won't move, everything on the system just stalls for a split second.  Temps on CPU seem within normal limits at about 70-80C.  I've read everything I could find about this issue, including problems with NVIDIA drivers, ACPI, firewall/antivirus, etc etc, and tried most of those suggestions.  
    I spent a long time doing all kinds of testing, putting the machine on AC power and max performance, shut down various devices, disabled any component power-off states, disabled NVIDIA and displays, changed bios settings etc.  
    After all of this, I *know* my issue is related to the Intel Ethernet component, because if I disable it and use wireless connectivity (or no network at all) the problem simply goes away.  Surprisingly, the wireless Centrino adapter, though slower, functions without any problem affecting DPC latency and I have no stutter with that (many have previously identified the wireless adapter being a problem especially related to power mgt).
    Unfortunately, I require an ethernet connection.  So just disabling that adapter is not an option.  Here is what I've done to workaround the issue, though I wish it would be fixed for good with some kind of update from Lenovo, though I've called and emailed them and they seem to be ignoring this issue.  
    **** UPDATE 3/1/2012 ****  
    SOLUTION RIGHT HERE:  INSTALL AN OLDER NETWORK DRIVER FROM HP (sounds crazy, but it works).  See below link to driver download.
    I (and many other owners of T420, 520, etc - see other posts if you doubt it) have *no* latency after installing this older driver from HP. But as soon as I install the Lenovo-provided driver 11.12.38.* or any later one from Microsoft or the Intel generic driver (intel no longer publishes the old driver), I see *immediate* problems with latency, mouse and audio stutter. But use the driver published by HP (specifically version 11.12.36.0, published 5/4/2011) -- Problem solved!  I tested with streaming and browsing for several hours and no spiking or stutter.
    Here's where to get the english language download from HP:  >> DRIVER DOWNLOAD PAGE HERE <<
    Lenovo, PLEASE: this is strong evidence of a faulty driver for those of us with a t420s (and other thinkpad users out there using the intel 82579LM chip under x64).  I encourage you to review this solution and engineer an update for the Intel gigabit adapter, or at minimum, roll back to the older driver or some Lenovo approved derivative so it doesn't cause all of us notebook users such a major headache.  It's very bizarre that we would need to go to another manufacturer to get a working driver...I was ready to return the machine over this issue! 
    Aside from that adapter problem, I've been pleased with the t420s performance and features.  Thanks again lopiuh for this workaround.  
    Mojojojo in Austin TX
    ADMIN EDIT - Lenovo is testing a beta ethernet driver.   If you are willing to try it, please see the link below, and my post on page 6 of this thread. - mark
    https://www.dropbox.com/s/llcgjaf45xpuoam/83rw20w1.zip
    ***** END UPDATE *****
    **** OLDER STUFF I TRIED, which somewhat helped, but the real solution is to use the old HP DRIVER above. ****** 
    Basically, my approach was to reduce the 'auto' parameters for the adapter, to reduce the amount of logic running on the adapter itself.
    1. Install the PRO set extension tools on this adapter, so you can more easily manage advanced settings.  I think Lenovo offers a version in the driver downloads area which adds this management extension, but it is not the standard one offered by the system update utility, and the intel site has a later driver, so I gambled and downloaded the latest version from Intel for this adapter.  It installed without issue, but I'm sure Lenovo would prefer you stick with their OEM packages. Anyway, here's the one I used: http://www.intel.com/support/ethernetcomponents/controllers/82579/sb/CS-032239.htm (link near the top for the download).  You may want to make a system restore point before you install any drivers outside of OEM approved.
    2.  Change the default settings for the adapter in Device Manager.  Right click properties for the Intel 82579LM in Network Adapters.  Change the link speed (if the extension was installed properly, you'll see the intel logo on the tab for Link Speed, and a choice for Speed and Duplex.  Change this from 'Auto Negotiate' to whatever speed your network is.  I have gigabit full duplex, and that worked for me.  This by itself was the biggest improvement with DPC latency.
    3. Go to the Advanced tab.  I took the approach that I wanted to disable as much 'auto' stuff as possible, and force the adapter to use a particular setting.  Thus: 
    Interrupt Moderation: Disabled
    Jumbo Packet: 9014 bytes (I have several devices that can use bigger packets on network, such as readynas)
    Performance Options: click properties: Flow control - Disabled; Interrupt Moderation Rate - Off; and then double the receive and transmit buffer sizes (for me this was 512 and 1024 respectively).
    I hope this may be helpful to some other owners, but I don't work for Lenovo or Intel so please don't blame me if something goes wrong during your tweaking.  This worked (for me) to significantly reduce stuttering problems, though they are not completely gone; your mileage may vary.  If you have this same problem, I'd appreciate if you would post about it so I can understand if it is a more widespread problem.
    Good luck, mojojojo
    Austin, TX
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Hi mojojoj0
    For my W520, up till now I do not have latency issues. My set of configuration for Intel NIC is slight different.
    2. This may cause connection problems when you are connecting to different network. Different network (switches, routers) have different configuration. Previously I set it to Gigabit Full Duplex, I can't connect to any 10/100 network until I change it back to Auto negotiation.
    I would suggest changing back to auto negotiation when you are connecting to outside network, not all places are using gigabit switches.
    3. Interesting, I guess I would try it and feedback and see how much improvement for network performance.
    From what I know, increasing receive and transmit buffer improve NIC and network card performance, but computer may slightly more memory.
    Maybe you can try this, part of my settings:
    Large Send Offload (IPv4) & (IPv6) Enabled
    TCP & UDP Checksum Offload (IPv4) & (IPv6) Tx & Rx Enabled
    IPv4 Checksum Offload Tx & Rx Enabled 
    Hope this helps!
    Cheers 
    Peter
    (Current: W520 4284-A99) (Refunded: W510 4876-A11)
    =============================================
    Does someone’s post help you? Give them kudos as a reward, as they will do better to improve 
    Mark it as solved if the solution works for you, so it could be reference for others in the future 
    Dolby Home Theater v4 (ThinkMix V2)!
    http://forums.lenovo.com/t5/W-Series-ThinkPad-Lapt​ops/W520-Sound-Enhancement-Thread/m-p/451401#M155... 

  • HOWTO: Low DPC latencies ( 100 us) on bootcamped Macbooks (Pro)

    Here is a small HOWTO for getting the lowest possible DPC latencies (<100 us) on bootcamped Macbooks Pro (late 2008):
    Disclaimer: I did all tests on my late 2008 Macbook Pro Unibody 2.8 GHz model with NVidia chipset and graphic. Most of the following suggestions should apply to standard Macbook models and likely older generation as well.
    First of all Intel Speedstep can lead to dropouts and higher DPC latencies on small load! Unfortunately all tools that are supposed to manually switch Speedstep off don't seem to run on the late Macbooks (Pro) while on OS X you can use "Coolbook".
    Your only way to make sure your processor is clocked high enough and not dynamically switching is to put up a constant load (like running your DAW pretty hot or running Prime95 at "Idle/Lowest" process Priority in the background). I will keep investigating if I can find a tool to switch Speedstep off.
    Most importantly (to get rid of really bad DPC latency spikes):
    Kill the process "KBDMGR.EXE"!
    That's Apple's driver for controlling brightness and keyboard lighting via the function keys and setting tap options for the trackpad. It seems to have broken multithreading!
    You can also change the CPU affinity of KBDMGR.EXE to CPU1 (not CPU0!) which will help decreasing DPC Latencies alot, but there will still be Audio dropouts.
    Here's a small toolkit I put together that allows you to conviniently enable/disable Apple's "Boot Camp" tray application (KBDMGR.EXE) via an icon link and/or keyboard shortcut. Optionally it will switch the function of the F-Keys automatically for you depending on whether Boot Camp is loaded or not.
    Furthermore it automatically turns Boot Camp's CPU priority to "Idle" and CPU affinity to CPU1 in order to turn down the bug induced DPC Latencies and prevent dropouts with Windows sounds and Media Player playback. Professional Audio users will find that only turning off Boot Camp will allow low audio latency usage. Installation instructions are included in the README.TXT for your convinience.
    Boot CampED download page
    Direct Download:
    Boot CampED.zip - 3.3 kb
    Turn off the Broadcom 802.11N WLAN driver via Device-Manager or update to the latest drivers via Microsoft Update Catalog.
    Like on OS X the Airport module can lead to audio dropouts. The DPC Latencies produced by the Broadcom driver are less regular than the KBDMGR thing, alot higher in value. Best thing is to try for your own needs.
    Update:Meanwhile a new Broadcom drivers was published via Microsoft's Update Catalog named "Broadcom - Network - Broadcom 4322AG 802.11a/b/g/draft-n Wi-Fi Adapter " (4322 is the chip used). This one comes with both low DPC latencies and finally the ability to use the full rate upto 300 mbit/s. Go get it! For safety you might still want to turn WLAN off during critical audio work though.
    Change the graphic-card driver to "Standard VGA Driver" via Device-Manager or use RIVATUNER to enforce a fixed clock-rate and performance mode.
    Update:The dynamic clock-rate switching happening with NVidia drivers in order to save power and keep temperatures low leads to extreme DPC spikes for each switch and constantly high DPC latencies when it settles in low performance 2D mode. RIVATUNER's "Enforce Performance Mode" option can be used to set the card to a fixed clock-rate. I recommend using "Low Power 3D" for audio work.
    User of XP might think that they don't need this, but be aware that on XP the NVidia driver keeps running at highest clock-rates in "Performance 3D Mode" all the time. Via RIVATUNER you can switch to "Low Power 3D".
    Turn off the ACPI compliant Battery driver via Device-Manager
    This driver polls the battery for its current load status and produces a small, single, short spike exactly every 15 seconds. In my own tests I found that it doesn't seem to affect low latency audio performance. Furthermore turning it off will remove monitoring of your current battery status. But if you are running on power-chord anyway and want to make absolutely sure you can turn it off.
    All other devices don't add much if anything to DPC latencies, but can savely be turned off if you don't need them (like Nvidia LAN, Bluetooth, Onboard High Definition Audio).
    Attention: Removing the Battery while the power chord is connected results in permanently reduced CPU clock (downto the lowest clock setting possible). According to Apple this is done to prevent overloading the power-supply during heavy load as it needs the assistance of the battery from time to time.

    I'd like to underline that these are workaround. Now that the Broadcom drivers are fixed it is up to Apple to fix KBDMGR and to get the NVidia drivers fixed!
    Furthermore it seems as if only Vista 32-bit and OS X are heavily affected by Intel Speedstep, Vista 64-bit and Windows 7 (32/64) work alot better in this regard. XP is a mixed bag.
    Here are some screenshots to prove that the workarounds do help:
    DPC Latency before applying the workarounds:
    DPC Latency Vista 64-bit (Idle, Speedstep enabled) after applying the workarounds:
    DPC Latency Windows 7 64-bit (Idle: Speedstep enabled) after applying the workarounds:
    As you can see Vista's DPCs run well below 100 us once everything is optimized, Windows 7 is a bit worse, XP is even better. But practically you get the same results when using all three for professional Audio work.
    Message was edited by: T1mur

  • Custom Bios for DPC Latency gone?

    I have the P43 Neo and suffer from DPC Latency spikes, which is very annoying since I work with audio a lot.
    However, the link to the 'custom bios' in the following topic is not available anymore:
    https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=125206.0
    Where can I download it?

    Quote
    MSI custom bios can be obtained from MSI Tech. here: http://ocss.msi.com.tw/

  • VLC audio problems on T400 - DPC Latency Issue?

    Hi Folks,
    When I try to use VLC player to play any video on my T400, I get audio stutters and other strange effects.  I'm wondering if it might have to do with all the audio DPC Latency issues this model has had.  Does anyone else have these issues?  Windows media player seems to work just fine, by the way.  DPC Latency is high when either program is playing, but remains high when VLC has paused playback (whereas windows media player doesn't induce high DPC Latency when paused).
    I've tried tweaking the buffer of VLC player, and a million other things, but nothing seems to help.  Hence my suspicion of DPC Latency issues.
    Thanks,
    Allie
    2764-CTO, Win XP Pro SP3, 2.8 GHz Dual Core, 3 GB Ram, 320 GB HDD, ATI Radeon 3450 w/ 256 MB, all drivers updated

    Just upgraded to Win 7, and the problem's gone. Must be an XP driver of some sort.

  • S20 Audio Stutter / DPC Latency...can't fix it. Need help!

    Hi everyone,
    I recently (last week) bought a Lenovo S20 (Xeon W3520 with memory upgrade to 6GB). I mainly
    use this workstation as a DAW for audio recording / editing. Instead of the preinstalled Windows XP (32bit)
    and the Vista Business that comes with the DAW, I installed Windows 7. Everything went fine,
    system is stable, ThinkVantage drivers are up to date. A NVIDIA GeForce 260 is used as graphic card.
    But for audio applications my S20 as it is right now, is simply unusable. I get drop outs/stutter even with the on board sound, if I play back a mp3 or wav file. I deactived unnessary devices / background programs, tested it with HT on/off, tested it without Speedstepping and without Turbo Mode. No difference. I get a regular DPC spike every 15 seconds. And the spikes are really high (16ms). No difference if I plug in an EMU 1820 PCI card instead of the on board sound. Disabling the on board LAN didn't make a difference either.
    Take a look: DPC Latency Screenshot
    Any idea how to solve this?
    Best,
    dynamitec
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    Hi erik,
    thanks for your reply!
    It's not that only Pro-Audio doesn't work on my machine. If I simply recover the Vista Business DVDs and try to play a Wav-File or Mp3 with Windows MediaPlayer I get dropouts every 15-16s - without anything else installed. Also websites for example hang if this spike occour. In my opinion this is a serious fault in my system (not to mention that I bought the workstation for Pro-Audio usage, which I simply can't do as it is right now).
    I first thought that it's maybe related to the hardware I build in (Graphic Card, SoundCard), but since it happens without any graphic card / additional soundcard installed it has to be a problem with the basis configuration.
    I'm calling Lenovo support tomorrow. I really need a replacement, since the workstation is outperformed by my old Q6600 system without any problems. And I'm really feeling like I wasted a lot of money for nothing
    Best,
    Benjamin

  • DPC Latency problem

    Hi everyone ;)
    I'm trying to fix my pc. I'm experiencing DPC Latency problem and it causes audio stuttering. I'm running Windows 8.1 x64. When I'm running LatencyMon, it shows me that some of my drivers give a really high latency.
    I was trying to install new drivers, turn off my soundcard (Sound blaster Audigy SE). The problem started to occur, just after a clean install of Windows 8.1, two days ago. Earlier I did not have any problems
    with DPC latency. The weird thing is, that I do not have any audio problems when playing games. The problems occur when I'm listening to music or watching movies. Thanks for your help and sorry for my bad english. 
    PS My computer specs:
    Gigabyte GA-G41M-Combo (rev. 1.3)
    4 GB DDR3 RAM
    Nvidia GeForce 450GTS
    Intel Core2Quad 2.5GHz
    Creative Sound Blaster Audigy SE
    Wireless mouse and keyboard (microsoft ones)
    Drivers causing DPC Latency:
    ntoskrnl.exe
    USBport.sys
    dxgkrnl.sys
    nvlddmkm.sys
    ataport.sys
    CLASSPNP.sys
    rspLLL64.sys
    Thank you for your help!

    Hi,
    First, please let me know what player you use to listen to music or watch movies? I considered the codec conflict.
    If there is any third part player installed, please remove it to check the issue.
    If the issue still persists, please upload the .etl file here for further research.
    Keep post.
    Kate Li
    TechNet Community Support

  • DPC latency - NDIS.SYS -

    Hello,
    I've spend days with this issue and done tons of research online and cannot find a resolution. 
    I can easily replicate this by streaming video online and here is an output from not even 3 minutes;
    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 or more DPC routines that belong to a driver running in your system appear to be executing
    for too long. At least one detected problem appears to be network related. In case you are using a WLAN adapter, try disabling it to get better results. 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  0:00:28  (h:mm:ss) on all processors.
    SYSTEM INFORMATION
    Computer name:                                        BASEMENT-PC
    OS version:                                           Windows 7 Service Pack 1, 6.1, build: 7601 (x64)
    Hardware:                                             Z68X-UD3H-B3, Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
    CPU:                                                  GenuineIntel Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz
    Logical processors:                                   4
    Processor groups:                                     1
    RAM:                                                  8109 MB total
    CPU SPEED
    Reported CPU speed:                                   3410.0 MHz
    Measured CPU speed:                                   2292.0 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):   1026890.71290
    Average measured interrupt to process latency (µs):   22.754394
    Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs):       1026762.790580
    Average measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs):       20.927825
     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):              217.898240
    Driver with highest ISR routine execution time:       ndis.sys - NDIS 6.20 driver, Microsoft Corporation
    Highest reported total ISR routine time (%):          1.516305
    Driver with highest ISR total time:                   ndis.sys - NDIS 6.20 driver, Microsoft Corporation
    Total time spent in ISRs (%)                          1.774242
    ISR count (execution time <250 µs):                   89542
    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):              5353.539003
    Driver with highest DPC routine execution time:       ndis.sys - NDIS 6.20 driver, Microsoft Corporation
    Highest reported total DPC routine time (%):          0.257649
    Driver with highest DPC total execution time:         ndis.sys - NDIS 6.20 driver, Microsoft Corporation
    Total time spent in DPCs (%)                          0.742536
    DPC count (execution time <250 µs):                   216143
    DPC count (execution time 250-500 µs):                0
    DPC count (execution time 500-999 µs):                69
    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:                 chrome.exe
    Total number of hard pagefaults                       148
    Hard pagefault count of hardest hit process:          90
    Highest hard pagefault resolution time (µs):          2645.792669
    Total time spent in hard pagefaults (%):              0.026785
    Number of processes hit:                              4
     PER CPU DATA
    CPU 0 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       5.116707
    CPU 0 ISR highest execution time (µs):                217.898240
    CPU 0 ISR total execution time (s):                   2.019442
    CPU 0 ISR count:                                      89542
    CPU 0 DPC highest execution time (µs):                5353.539003
    CPU 0 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.821584
    CPU 0 DPC count:                                      211370
    CPU 1 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       0.373808
    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):                164.455718
    CPU 1 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.004153
    CPU 1 DPC count:                                      1067
    CPU 2 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       0.360522
    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):                200.432258
    CPU 2 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.008878
    CPU 2 DPC count:                                      1420
    CPU 3 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       0.167079
    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):                51.623460
    CPU 3 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.010540
    CPU 3 DPC count:                                      2356
    This computer is VERY clean and has no anti-virus/firewalls/software
    All drivers are updated (I'm not sure if the BIOS is updated yet)
    SO far from research I've change my SSD to AHCI from IDE after doing some registry changes. MADE IT SO MUCH FASTER not why the original builder of the computer didn't do this in the beginning
    I've disabled power setting on the WIFI adapter
    When I disable the WIFI it seems to fix the issue but I NEED WIFI - I can't find anywhere online that explains if buying a new WIFI NIC would fix this?
    I tried to run in command 'verifier' and an option to select all drivers on the computer - It made me restart but after that it crashed and needed to be set back to a restore point???

    So I disabled the WIFI card and hooked up directly to the switch and I'm not seeing NDIS.sys coming up as latency and after light testing it appears I'm not freezing up for the second or so randomly.
    I think I"ll buy another WIFI card and see what happens.
    LatencyMon does show now
    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  0:03:51  (h:mm:ss) on all processors.
    SYSTEM INFORMATION
    Computer name:                                        BASEMENT-PC
    OS version:                                           Windows 7 Service Pack 1, 6.1, build: 7601 (x64)
    Hardware:                                             Z68X-UD3H-B3, Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd.
    CPU:                                                  GenuineIntel Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3570K CPU @ 3.40GHz
    Logical processors:                                   4
    Processor groups:                                     1
    RAM:                                                  8109 MB total
    CPU SPEED
    Reported CPU speed:                                   3410.0 MHz
    Measured CPU speed:                                   2280.0 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):   10308.587998
    Average measured interrupt to process latency (µs):   1.961673
    Highest measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs):       533.311552
    Average measured interrupt to DPC latency (µs):       0.726360
     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):              185.646628
    Driver with highest ISR routine execution time:       dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
    Highest reported total ISR routine time (%):          0.138654
    Driver with highest ISR total time:                   dxgkrnl.sys - DirectX Graphics Kernel, Microsoft Corporation
    Total time spent in ISRs (%)                          0.191304
    ISR count (execution time <250 µs):                   333205
    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):              537.933138
    Driver with highest DPC routine execution time:       nvlddmkm.sys - NVIDIA Windows Kernel Mode Driver, Version 340.52 , NVIDIA Corporation
    Highest reported total DPC routine time (%):          0.078815
    Driver with highest DPC total execution time:         USBPORT.SYS - USB 1.1 & 2.0 Port Driver, Microsoft Corporation
    Total time spent in DPCs (%)                          0.362878
    DPC count (execution time <250 µs):                   1825222
    DPC count (execution time 250-500 µs):                0
    DPC count (execution time 500-999 µs):                10
    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:                 chrome.exe
    Total number of hard pagefaults                       1559
    Hard pagefault count of hardest hit process:          939
    Highest hard pagefault resolution time (µs):          249817.816129
    Total time spent in hard pagefaults (%):              0.436725
    Number of processes hit:                              12
     PER CPU DATA
    CPU 0 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       12.339137
    CPU 0 ISR highest execution time (µs):                185.646628
    CPU 0 ISR total execution time (s):                   1.769483
    CPU 0 ISR count:                                      333205
    CPU 0 DPC highest execution time (µs):                537.933138
    CPU 0 DPC total execution time (s):                   2.342733
    CPU 0 DPC count:                                      1394787
    CPU 1 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       5.371672
    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):                210.444575
    CPU 1 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.574316
    CPU 1 DPC count:                                      296645
    CPU 2 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       2.886236
    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):                166.552786
    CPU 2 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.056599
    CPU 2 DPC count:                                      16722
    CPU 3 Interrupt cycle time (s):                       1.892698
    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):                178.875953
    CPU 3 DPC total execution time (s):                   0.382826
    CPU 3 DPC count:                                      117078

  • Satellite U500-1DZ DPC latency problem with the graphic card geforce 310M

    Hello
    I have a problem with de DPC latency cause by the nvdia card driver.
    I use my computer for audio and it's really not possible to work.
    graph with geforce abled :
    http://nsm04.casimages.com/img/2010/09/22/100922123519210586795529.png
    when i disable the graphic card :
    http://nsm04.casimages.com/img/2010/09/22/100922123519210586795528.png
    Please give me an answer.
    My computer is a Toshiba satellite U500-1DZ, intel i5
    Thank you

    Hi, thank you for your answers.
    I have updated the last nvdia driver, the new bios and everything I found on this website, but It doesn't change anything...
    Apparently I'm not the only one to have this problem, but I don't know if it comes from Toshiba or from Nvdia.
    Do you know if it's normal to have four times "NVDIA High definition Audio" in the audio/video/games controllers ?
    When I seactivated it it's a litlle bit less worth (but still not good)...
    I'm using a preinstalled windows 7 64 bit version
    Thank you !
    Fred
    Message was edited by: fredo0411

  • Videoprt.sys is giving me high dpc latency. Does anyone know a fix?

    Hiya. I am optimizing my windows-partition. Killing all unessecary drivers, services and processes goes a long way. Also due to sloppy coding in XP kernel, I need to set processes to idle priority, to avoid CPU2 stalling CPU1 when maxed. I have also set win32priorityseparation to 25, which is superficially similar to a low-latency linux-config I did.
    However still, I have a module "Videoprt.sys" which reports 1.5ms DPC latency. (Using RATTv3) Dpc latency checker also reports DPC latency of 1.5ms. I see computers out there with 10uS DPC latency
    Does anyone know a fix for this?
    Peace Be With You.

    Fixed it needed to have a return null;
    this is the code
    if
            (MonthjComboBox.getSelectedItem().equals("") ||
             DayjComboBox.getSelectedItem().equals("") ||
             YearjComboBox.getSelectedItem().equals("")){
            return null;

  • MacBook Air  dpc latency problem

    My MacBook Air (2x 2.86 GHz, 128 GB SSD) has poor dpc latency values, prohibiting, e.g., recording of DAB (digital audio broadcast). The problem would seem to be caused by the "too slow" USB drivers. I wonder, whether there is a remedy for this available? For details related to dpc latency see
    http://www.thesycon.de/deu/latency_check.shtml
    PS: Elgato apparently does not provide software/drivers for recording DAB. So switching to Mac OS on my machine does not help.
    Siggi Engelbrecht

    Hallo T1MUR,
    vielen Dank für den Hinweis. Hat's gebracht!
    Thanks a lot for that hint, I followed your suggestions and it worked just fine. The scripts you provided in my case all appear to just switch off KbdMgr.exe without leaving me with a lot of choices. I still have to figure out whether this behaviour can be improved by editing your batch files. For the time being it probably would suffice to kill the process in the windows task manager and to switch it on again if needed by double clicking it in the c:\programs\boot camp directory. One then has to reenable the function keys manually, whereas all other tunings affected by boot camp are kept. This is slightly inconvenient, but it's ok. The differences may be due to the fact that I am dealing with a MacBook Air, not a MacBook Pro.
    Thanks again for your help, I really appreciated this.
    Siggi Engelbrecht

  • MSI calls gt780 a "sound machine" but it has bad dpc latency and ground loop

    Good quality sound on a laptop is governed by two things, freedom from ground loops and low DPC latency.
    Ground Loop Hum: this occurs when manufacturers use poorly isolated power supplies (CHEAP POWER SUPPLIES).  How it manifests is when you plug your laptop into an external sound production system (Stereo or headphones or mixer, etc).  Well when you turn up the volume you will notice this weird humming/slightly screetching noise.  It often will change pitch as you move mouse etc.  Its a ground loop.  It comes from poor isolation and ALL PROFESSIONAL audio equipment is designed to eliminate this.  Even a cheap ghettoblaster is  But not this "sound specialized laptop."  Aweful.  You will know it is a ground loop because when you hear the noise unplug th epower supply to the laptop and Poof!  its gone.
    DPC Latency  Where as ground loops will just give you poor sound output, DPC latency is a far more sinister problem for a person who is going to use a computer for professional sound.  It is related to something called an IRQ request and it occurs on laptops that are not designed to prioritize audio. 
    Download this tool and run it on your gt780.  http://www.thesycon.de/deu/latency_check.shtml  You will note its mostly green but occasionally it will have red spikes.  Those red spikes represent audio drop outs so if your hope was to use this computer for professional sound capture or production (protools, abletone, cuebase).  Think again.  Those will be big "POP!!!!!"s when they occur during actual audio manipulation.
    Sometimes manufacturers release firmware or drivers that help with DPC.  Lets pray but as for the ground loop.  That is not and will not go away unless they get it their hearts to use a proper power supply.  Shame on you msi for touting this as an audio laptop when its audio simply sucks crap.  Basically you threw a few loud speakers and you call it made for sound??? HARDLY.
    Other then that its fast.  What a waste...

    Ok, I have found out the "sleep mode" kicking in was one of the major culprits.  I dissabled that and latencies are a lot better.  No red spikes in over ten minute but not yet under any load.  If any one else is trying the program please post your results.

  • DPC Latency issue, need to update BIOS?

    I'm into recording music and latency is of great importance. I did a DPC latency check and noticed I was getting some major peaks, constantly. I tried everything, removing sound card, disabling drivers, etc, etc and nothing works. Then I did a google search and found this: https://forum-en.msi.com/index.php?topic=125206.0
    I have...
    Model name: 7519 v1.0
    M/B ERP Version: 06
    I have NEVER flashed BIOS before and have no idea how to do it. I don't even have a floppy drive. I really need to fix this latency issue though, otherwise I will have to buy a new computer :(
    Can someone help me? I sent en inquiry to the support, but did not get a reply.
    Thank you.

    Quote from: Jack on 29-March-11, 00:00:44
    What is the model name of your mainboard?  There are many MS-7519 mainboards with different PCB and ERP numbers (your ERP number is incomplete, there must be three digits):
    http://eu.msi.com/service/search/?kw=7519&type=product
    The best way to approach this, is to check your current BIOS Version as displayed on the P.O.S.T. Status Screen:
    Write down the full BIOS ID String as it appears in the red box in the example picture.  When we know the BIOS Version, it is possible to check whether or not there is Latency Fix for your board out there or not.
    Have a look here and make yourself familiar with our MSI HQ Forum USB Flashing Tool:  >>Use the MSI HQ Forum USB flasher<<.

  • Dv6 series - DPC latency spikes

    I currently have a Dell laptop with frequent DPC latency spikes. As a result, I will be returning the laptop for a new laptop that does not have those spikes.
    http://www.shopping.hp.com/webapp/shopping/product_detail.do?storeName=storefronts&landing=rts_noteb...
    This model looks really good, but I have some questions
    I was wondering, does any have DPC latency spikes on this system? I don't want to replace my current system for another system with the same problems.

    Bumping this thread.
    Can someone please respond.

Maybe you are looking for

  • How to get my .pdf filesize down (I have tried many things!)

    Hi everyone. After about an hour and a half of thoroughly searching the web, seeing others suggestions that don't work for me, or trying online resizers, I am now officially pissed off, especially since I consider myself a somewhat computer savvy per

  • Buying SIM-Free Iphone4 in the UK ?

    Good evening, I'm visiting london soon i hope , and planning to get Iphone4 , I read somewhere that i can get a SIM-Free IPhone4 from the apple online store .. can I buy it (unlocked) from the Apple local stores in London(physical stores), if yes , w

  • Old OS needing Update but can't find Snow Leopard

    I'm still running on Leopard but now HAVE to update my OS because Leopard isn't supported by anything.  To get Lion or Mountain Lion I have to first have Snow Leopard, but I can't find it anywhere!  How do I get it?!

  • 3.6.3 Does not appear to cache pages.

    I upgraded to 3.6.3 from 3.5.1. I don't think EITHER cache web pages. To test I use a 56k modem, go to Ebay, search a product, display 198 items, let it FINISH loading the page, go to the SECOND page, then hit the BACK arrow. Reloading the first page

  • Pictures are displayed twice when attached to messages

    When I receive an email with a picture attached/embedded as part of the page, it shows up twice--once within the page, and once again with the attachments at the end of the email. It doesn't happen all the time, but ALWAYS when I get an email from my