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Supported on: Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, and Windows Server 2019 |
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Required permissions: When monitored locally and remotely, only domain user privilege is required and the user must be a part of the Performance Logs user group. |
Please refer to the Microsoft knowledge base articles listed below.
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Supported on: Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, and Windows Server 2019 |
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Required permissions: When monitored locally and remotely, only domain user privilege is required and the user must be part of the Performance Logs user group. |
Please refer to the Microsoft knowledge base articles listed below.
Information only. Indicates total, free, and used physical and virtual memory.
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Indicates that the performance of the server may be degraded because of too many page faults.
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Supported on: Windows Server 2012, Windows Server 2012 R2, Windows Server 2016, and Windows Server 2019 |
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Required permissions: When monitored locally and remotely, only domain user privilege is required and the user must be a part of the Performance Logs user group. |
A page fault occurs whenever the Windows® 2000 operating system tries to access a virtual memory page that is not currently in memory or is in the incorrect place in memory. The process requesting the page must wait while the operating system makes room for the requested page in memory and reads it from disk or relocates it, which may cause a significant delay for the faulting process. If many processes are causing page faults, a condition known as thrashing can occur. If this happens, the performance of the server goes to zero as the operating system spends most of its time managing memory and very little running applications.
A continuously high page fault rate is an indication that the server is running too many processes with insufficient real memory. If left unattended, Active Directory® performance will suffer greatly, and eventually the directory system agent (DSA) will be unable to service requests, which can result in failed logins and authentications, as well as the inability of some applications and services to run at all.
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Run the Windows NT Task Manager and open the Processes tab. |
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Select View | Select Columns. |
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