Hi there, so ive been contacted saying im causing this thing and i think i fixed it but i need to apparently check im not harming the disk, so i need someone who knows what to do to help me, i dont think a minecraft server is gonna reck a disk, that saying i ran a GTA5 Server fine on there with only 2 cores and now im at 4 cores, So, i dont think its that and i dont think its me.
So if the CEO or someone who knows how to do this! Thank You. Supman138
Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
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Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
Usually this happens when a customer is running out of memory or software is misconfigured (such as if it is crashing and endlessly restarting). It should be relatively easy to find what is causing it, in any case.
What OS are you running? If this is Windows, you can use the Disk page of the Resource Monitor tool to see which specific files are being read and written and pretty quickly determine what is causing it.
What OS are you running? If this is Windows, you can use the Disk page of the Resource Monitor tool to see which specific files are being read and written and pretty quickly determine what is causing it.
Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
Its windows 2012 OS, and im there, but i dont know what to look at and what could be concerning?
Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
At the top of that tab, you'll see a list of files that are being read/written to. The biggest number will probably be the one that you need to address.
Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
The Biggest One Is System
Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
at 14million b per sec
Re: Heavy disk access / heavy I/O
The system process follows through on disk writes that are generally triggered by other processes. Do you see another process there?
If it is truly the system itself doing it on its own, then you'd want to look in the system log to see if Windows is kicking out warnings, and you'd want to make sure that you aren't running out of memory and forcing it to use swap space.
If it is truly the system itself doing it on its own, then you'd want to look in the system log to see if Windows is kicking out warnings, and you'd want to make sure that you aren't running out of memory and forcing it to use swap space.