What does PID mean in Resource Monitor?

What does PID mean in Resource Monitor? Short for process identifier, a PID is a unique number that identifies each running processes in an operating system, such as Linux, Unix, macOS, and Microsoft Windows. The

What does PID mean in Resource Monitor?

Short for process identifier, a PID is a unique number that identifies each running processes in an operating system, such as Linux, Unix, macOS, and Microsoft Windows. The output below shows a few of the processes running in Windows and their associated PIDs listed in the PID column.

How do I stop PID 4 from using port 80?

Open task manager, go to processes tab and check “PID” in Menu/View/Select Columns… , then look for the process using the PID found in last step. If it is a normal application or IIS, disable it or uninstall. Some programs (such as Skype) have the option to disable its use of port 80.

What to do about excessive disk access with PID 4?

Using the Resource Monitor I detected excessive disk access from the system process with PID 4. Following some tips, I disabled the anti-virus on the System Volume Information folder, hoping it will help (I don’t want to disable system restore).

Can a tape drive be attached to an IOP?

If any disk drives or communications IOAs are attached to the IOP, any devices or applications using this will be disrupted. This document is intended to help customers correct possible problems after configuration changes done to tape drives or tape libraries, and the IOP only has tape drives or optical drives attached to it.

How many MBS does PID 4 read per second?

When running a simple extraction of a ZIP file, I can see the WinRAR reading a few hundreds KBs per second from the file, but PID 4 reads dozens of MBs per second from the same file. After cancelling the operation, PID 4 keeps accessing the file for around 30 seconds, reading many MBs per second.

How to IPL an IOP with tape devices attached on the system I?

This document describes how to IPL an IOP that has tape devices attached on an IBM System i . Caution: Using this process incorrectly could result in data loss and/or can bring a system down. If any disk drives or communications IOAs are attached to the IOP, any devices or applications using this will be disrupted.