F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Excessive memory consumption without active processes detected. Explained and resolved.

Excessive memory consumption without active processes detected. Explained and resolved.

Excessive memory consumption without active processes detected. Explained and resolved.

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TheAdamYT
Member
158
01-11-2016, 09:51 AM
#1
Hello everyone, currently some users (including myself) might notice increased RAM consumption after keeping many windows open. Once those windows are closed, the usage doesn’t drop as expected. The issue stems from the "Desktop Window Manager," a recognized Windows 10 memory leak that Microsoft hasn’t resolved yet. In my experience, it leads to more than 8 GB of extra RAM being used. There’s a method to alleviate it. You can end the process while the system runs without any open windows (though this may cause crashes if not handled carefully) and it will restart shortly. Here’s how: Go to Task Manager, select Performance, then Resource Monitor at the bottom, choose Memory, locate the "dwm.exe" process, right-click it, and click End Process. The screen will go dark for a few seconds before the process restarts using less than 200 MB of RAM. Restarting the system does the same, but this is the only option at the moment. I hope Microsoft addresses this soon. Cheers
T
TheAdamYT
01-11-2016, 09:51 AM #1

Hello everyone, currently some users (including myself) might notice increased RAM consumption after keeping many windows open. Once those windows are closed, the usage doesn’t drop as expected. The issue stems from the "Desktop Window Manager," a recognized Windows 10 memory leak that Microsoft hasn’t resolved yet. In my experience, it leads to more than 8 GB of extra RAM being used. There’s a method to alleviate it. You can end the process while the system runs without any open windows (though this may cause crashes if not handled carefully) and it will restart shortly. Here’s how: Go to Task Manager, select Performance, then Resource Monitor at the bottom, choose Memory, locate the "dwm.exe" process, right-click it, and click End Process. The screen will go dark for a few seconds before the process restarts using less than 200 MB of RAM. Restarting the system does the same, but this is the only option at the moment. I hope Microsoft addresses this soon. Cheers

M
MikaCupcake
Member
71
01-23-2016, 06:31 AM
#2
Is ISLC really doing the same action? Check the link for details.
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MikaCupcake
01-23-2016, 06:31 AM #2

Is ISLC really doing the same action? Check the link for details.

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Serpenh33
Member
208
01-25-2016, 08:33 PM
#3
It might work, but I won’t use low-quality third-party tools to solve a Microsoft issue or tidy up my appdata folders. Doing so could lead to further problems if the software isn’t reliable.
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Serpenh33
01-25-2016, 08:33 PM #3

It might work, but I won’t use low-quality third-party tools to solve a Microsoft issue or tidy up my appdata folders. Doing so could lead to further problems if the software isn’t reliable.