F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Windows 10 experiences crashes due to a full page file, while the actual physical RAM isn't being used.

Windows 10 experiences crashes due to a full page file, while the actual physical RAM isn't being used.

Windows 10 experiences crashes due to a full page file, while the actual physical RAM isn't being used.

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garto123
Member
53
09-28-2016, 02:20 PM
#1
Hello, the name clearly describes the issue. When Windows uses the page file, it swaps to physical RAM that isn’t being used, but instead of freeing up space, it causes the system to crash because there’s no available memory.
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garto123
09-28-2016, 02:20 PM #1

Hello, the name clearly describes the issue. When Windows uses the page file, it swaps to physical RAM that isn’t being used, but instead of freeing up space, it causes the system to crash because there’s no available memory.

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Hypersnake
Member
208
10-03-2016, 06:58 AM
#2
Welcome to Windows 10. It understands more than you think and will act as it should. This is one of the many reasons I choose not to use it. Yet that's neither clear nor important. There are solid reasons to keep the page file active. Let it stay on. Turning it off will lead to slow performance since the system was built to use it even with plenty of RAM.
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Hypersnake
10-03-2016, 06:58 AM #2

Welcome to Windows 10. It understands more than you think and will act as it should. This is one of the many reasons I choose not to use it. Yet that's neither clear nor important. There are solid reasons to keep the page file active. Let it stay on. Turning it off will lead to slow performance since the system was built to use it even with plenty of RAM.

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LooseDawg
Senior Member
628
10-03-2016, 10:03 AM
#3
This information is referenced in the system documentation. Screenshots are available for visual reference. Rammap displays application details, and the Task Manager shows a RAM page view. The system automatically manages the pagefile for optimal performance.
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LooseDawg
10-03-2016, 10:03 AM #3

This information is referenced in the system documentation. Screenshots are available for visual reference. Rammap displays application details, and the Task Manager shows a RAM page view. The system automatically manages the pagefile for optimal performance.

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Mrapplefox13
Member
193
10-03-2016, 10:13 AM
#4
I dislike this operating system but I can't stop using Windows. I could easily adjust the page file managed by the system, but the problem keeps happening regardless—whether it's enabled or not. I don't want to boost the page file to unrealistic sizes just temporarily; I just want Windows to treat it as virtual RAM instead of regular physical RAM.
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Mrapplefox13
10-03-2016, 10:13 AM #4

I dislike this operating system but I can't stop using Windows. I could easily adjust the page file managed by the system, but the problem keeps happening regardless—whether it's enabled or not. I don't want to boost the page file to unrealistic sizes just temporarily; I just want Windows to treat it as virtual RAM instead of regular physical RAM.

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craej
Junior Member
17
10-22-2016, 03:04 AM
#5
Let Windows handle everything itself, don't manually adjust settings. My system has 64GB and Windows (currently Windows 9) automatically manages a 5GB page file. Just let it run, it's not necessary to worry.
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craej
10-22-2016, 03:04 AM #5

Let Windows handle everything itself, don't manually adjust settings. My system has 64GB and Windows (currently Windows 9) automatically manages a 5GB page file. Just let it run, it's not necessary to worry.

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999GOT666
Member
174
10-30-2016, 12:22 AM
#6
I’m unable to capture a screenshot since the system slows down and freezes when the page file fills up. I verified this using Task Manager during my Minecraft test, and while the RAM usage remained stable, the page file kept growing.
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999GOT666
10-30-2016, 12:22 AM #6

I’m unable to capture a screenshot since the system slows down and freezes when the page file fills up. I verified this using Task Manager during my Minecraft test, and while the RAM usage remained stable, the page file kept growing.

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Buns_of_Steel
Member
217
10-30-2016, 05:24 PM
#7
Looking for programs that use it? I don’t have enough details to pinpoint them. It might be a leak, so reinstalling Windows could help resolve the issue.
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Buns_of_Steel
10-30-2016, 05:24 PM #7

Looking for programs that use it? I don’t have enough details to pinpoint them. It might be a leak, so reinstalling Windows could help resolve the issue.

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LeonardoGame
Member
235
11-19-2016, 04:53 AM
#8
The setup involves four drives: one SSD running the OS and three HDDs for storage. I want the OS to store the page file on an HDD instead of the SSD, but even with automatic management, it doesn’t seem to fix the problem. During testing with Minecraft, background apps like Discord and Telegram Desktop were normal. I recorded a video to clarify the situation, as OBS struggled when everything crashed. The OS filled the page file (which I had disabled), causing crashes instead of using RAM. Video reference: video_2020-12-07_02-36-55.mp4
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LeonardoGame
11-19-2016, 04:53 AM #8

The setup involves four drives: one SSD running the OS and three HDDs for storage. I want the OS to store the page file on an HDD instead of the SSD, but even with automatic management, it doesn’t seem to fix the problem. During testing with Minecraft, background apps like Discord and Telegram Desktop were normal. I recorded a video to clarify the situation, as OBS struggled when everything crashed. The OS filled the page file (which I had disabled), causing crashes instead of using RAM. Video reference: video_2020-12-07_02-36-55.mp4

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Taybaybay
Posting Freak
850
11-19-2016, 04:16 PM
#9
no you really want the page file on the ssd, its so much faster. Don't put a page file on a hdd. That could easily be a driver issue or something like that. Id reinstall windows cause im lazy, but there are tools that look at whats using the memory. SInce there is no disk io, it doesn't seem to be storing anything, just allocating virtual memory.
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Taybaybay
11-19-2016, 04:16 PM #9

no you really want the page file on the ssd, its so much faster. Don't put a page file on a hdd. That could easily be a driver issue or something like that. Id reinstall windows cause im lazy, but there are tools that look at whats using the memory. SInce there is no disk io, it doesn't seem to be storing anything, just allocating virtual memory.

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Kynedee
Posting Freak
784
11-19-2016, 09:42 PM
#10
What kind of driving problem is occurring? Also, I recently installed Windows and don’t want to reinstall it again.
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Kynedee
11-19-2016, 09:42 PM #10

What kind of driving problem is occurring? Also, I recently installed Windows and don’t want to reinstall it again.

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