![]() ![]() If you look at the Processes tab and see that the problem is not clearly attributable to a demanding app, it is very likely the result of an otherwise obscure process bug. You can open Windows Task Manager by right-clicking on the taskbar and selecting Task Manager, from there you can check the CPU usage in Windows. ![]() But if you want to write some scripts to calculate specific statistical properties from the data, I would suggest you to export it as a CSV file (hint: you can always transform a CSV file that was generated from Export-Counter via relog generatedFile.csv -o myFileAsPerfmonGraph.blg -format BIN, but this also works the other way).From there, you can then either stop the processes that are using up disproportionate resources or, if the process in question isn’t normally such a drain on CPU and memory, work to fix the underlying issues. The BLG file, you can directly open as a graph in windows performance monitor.
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