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Windows Manager on desktop shows excessive GPU consumption.

Windows Manager on desktop shows excessive GPU consumption.

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emmalr2002
Junior Member
3
05-14-2019, 11:14 PM
#1
Hello fellow linusians, I've encountered an unusual pattern with the dwm.exe process and wanted some guidance. A bit of context: I was attempting to optimize my system for smooth 4K@60 performance in Witcher 3 on ultra/high settings. My setup includes a Ryzen 3800X, 32GB RAM, and an RTX 2080 Super. While the game runs reasonably well—about 50 frames at ultra and 55-60 at high settings—I notice something odd. When no game is active, the GPU usage in Task Manager and MSI Afterburner spikes to 10-15%, split between Desktop Windows Manager and Client Server Runtime Process. I've researched these processes and believe they're likely causing the problem due to modern Windows behavior. My main concern is how dwm.exe handles GPU load during gameplay. Testing shows all the game's processing went through dwm.exe, while witcher.exe uses only a tiny fraction of GPU resources (around 0.1%). MSI Afterburner reports near-full utilization. Is this typical? If not, what steps can I take to resolve it? Thanks in advance for any insights. P.S. I tested on my monitor at 1080p, not a TV.
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emmalr2002
05-14-2019, 11:14 PM #1

Hello fellow linusians, I've encountered an unusual pattern with the dwm.exe process and wanted some guidance. A bit of context: I was attempting to optimize my system for smooth 4K@60 performance in Witcher 3 on ultra/high settings. My setup includes a Ryzen 3800X, 32GB RAM, and an RTX 2080 Super. While the game runs reasonably well—about 50 frames at ultra and 55-60 at high settings—I notice something odd. When no game is active, the GPU usage in Task Manager and MSI Afterburner spikes to 10-15%, split between Desktop Windows Manager and Client Server Runtime Process. I've researched these processes and believe they're likely causing the problem due to modern Windows behavior. My main concern is how dwm.exe handles GPU load during gameplay. Testing shows all the game's processing went through dwm.exe, while witcher.exe uses only a tiny fraction of GPU resources (around 0.1%). MSI Afterburner reports near-full utilization. Is this typical? If not, what steps can I take to resolve it? Thanks in advance for any insights. P.S. I tested on my monitor at 1080p, not a TV.

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WoofyMonster
Member
121
05-16-2019, 02:40 AM
#2
Everything is fine, but the task manager isn't displaying all GPU load categories.
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WoofyMonster
05-16-2019, 02:40 AM #2

Everything is fine, but the task manager isn't displaying all GPU load categories.

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NagolGamer
Junior Member
4
05-16-2019, 04:30 AM
#3
Yes, you can track real GPU usage per process using tools like `GPU-Detect`, `nvprof`, or system monitoring utilities that expose GPU metrics.
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NagolGamer
05-16-2019, 04:30 AM #3

Yes, you can track real GPU usage per process using tools like `GPU-Detect`, `nvprof`, or system monitoring utilities that expose GPU metrics.

K
216
05-16-2019, 01:22 PM
#4
Never considered it before.
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Kawaiichan1776
05-16-2019, 01:22 PM #4

Never considered it before.

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BestkingJoris
Member
213
05-16-2019, 08:56 PM
#5
It’s not everything being perfect. There’s been unusual behavior lately, possibly dating back to around Windows 1903 with DWM and Nvidia graphics. I’ve found a couple of relevant discussions online: one on Microsoft’s forum about high GPU usage in Windows 10 and another on Steam community threads. When searching for similar issues, the results are varied but generally point to DWM getting stuck in unexpected tasks, leading to excessive GPU activity when there should be none. Personally, I’m experiencing this too—before any DirectX game, my desktop freezes because of DWM. Even after closing games like Monster Hunter World or Rimworld, the issue persists. Exiting a game leaves the screen flickering and unresponsive until I log out and back in. Some users tried reverting to older versions or drivers, but that only delays the problem. I’m considering a full Windows reinstall now, though others have suggested rolling back to previous versions, which isn’t ideal.
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BestkingJoris
05-16-2019, 08:56 PM #5

It’s not everything being perfect. There’s been unusual behavior lately, possibly dating back to around Windows 1903 with DWM and Nvidia graphics. I’ve found a couple of relevant discussions online: one on Microsoft’s forum about high GPU usage in Windows 10 and another on Steam community threads. When searching for similar issues, the results are varied but generally point to DWM getting stuck in unexpected tasks, leading to excessive GPU activity when there should be none. Personally, I’m experiencing this too—before any DirectX game, my desktop freezes because of DWM. Even after closing games like Monster Hunter World or Rimworld, the issue persists. Exiting a game leaves the screen flickering and unresponsive until I log out and back in. Some users tried reverting to older versions or drivers, but that only delays the problem. I’m considering a full Windows reinstall now, though others have suggested rolling back to previous versions, which isn’t ideal.

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ThatMiningGuy
Senior Member
704
05-18-2019, 04:15 AM
#6
I thought you were the only one, but my GPU is acting up...
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ThatMiningGuy
05-18-2019, 04:15 AM #6

I thought you were the only one, but my GPU is acting up...

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MooMoo2011
Senior Member
690
05-18-2019, 04:43 AM
#7
There are no changes yet. The issue persists with dwm.exe consuming a large portion of your GPU when running rainmeter, but dropping to minimal usage when idle.
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MooMoo2011
05-18-2019, 04:43 AM #7

There are no changes yet. The issue persists with dwm.exe consuming a large portion of your GPU when running rainmeter, but dropping to minimal usage when idle.

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beschteLars
Member
221
05-18-2019, 01:01 PM
#8
Has anyone resolved the problem? I've been experiencing the same issue for a few days now.
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beschteLars
05-18-2019, 01:01 PM #8

Has anyone resolved the problem? I've been experiencing the same issue for a few days now.

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92
05-18-2019, 01:46 PM
#9
You're experiencing the same problem. Adjusting the priority of dwm.exe in Task Manager can provide temporary relief, and rebooting often resolves it briefly. Initially, your PC won't start properly because the GPU is overloaded. Restarting either fixes the issue temporarily or leads to crashes later. This cycle usually repeats daily.
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Oo_BigBen10_oO
05-18-2019, 01:46 PM #9

You're experiencing the same problem. Adjusting the priority of dwm.exe in Task Manager can provide temporary relief, and rebooting often resolves it briefly. Initially, your PC won't start properly because the GPU is overloaded. Restarting either fixes the issue temporarily or leads to crashes later. This cycle usually repeats daily.

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stephanie2005
Member
233
05-18-2019, 03:46 PM
#10
I'm experiencing the same issue again today. What's going on?
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stephanie2005
05-18-2019, 03:46 PM #10

I'm experiencing the same issue again today. What's going on?

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