(Approx. 797 words)
Vista and the Reliability
& Performance Monitor
By Vinny LaBash, a member
and regular columnist of the Sarasota Personal Computer Users Group, Inc.,
Florida
vlabash(at)comcast.net
www.spcug.org
Obtained from APCUG with the
author's permission for publication by APCUG member groups.
Anyone who has spent time
trying to understand the Windows XP Performance Monitor is going to love
Vista’s Reliability & Performance Monitor.
No more will you have to figure out what the various performance
procedures are really measuring. All
the confusion has been eliminated and a well designed screen utility makes
everything vastly simplified. Every
time you run a program on your system, performance is affected in some
way. The new Vista Performance Monitor
allows you to track these operations on a real-time basis or to collect data for
analysis at a later time. The utility
does this by taking configuration information, performance counters, data
specific to program events, and then merging everything into Data Collection
sets. Microsoft has prefigured all the
important details into a completely revised utility that is not only easy to
use, but easy to understand. This new
utility provides you with a set of preconfigured elements that you can use to
monitor the reliability of your system. This article will give you a detailed
overview of the Reliability Monitor, and show how to use its System Stability
Chart to track how your system behaves.
Here’s how to get to the Reliability
and Performance Monitor:
1.
Left-click the orb at
the left side of the task bar.
2.
Right-click the Computer
button.
3.
Select Manage
from the popup menu.
An alternate selection
method is to right-click the orb and type reliability in the Start
Search text box. Either way the Computer
Management dialog box will appear.
Expand the Reliability
and Performance branch and the Monitoring Tools branch by clicking
on the arrows adjacent to their icons.
(See illustration)
Click the Reliability
Monitor icon and it will appear in the center pane. Click both Show/Hide Console Tree and
the Show/Hide Action Pane buttons to fill the screen with the Reliability
Monitor.
To get the best perspective, maximize the window. Dragging the scroll bar all the way to the
left brings the Reliability Monitor back to the beginning of time, that is, to
when Vista was installed.
The line diagram in the
upper part of the window is the main feature of the utility. This line is called the stability
index. Vista starts out with a
reliability rating of 10 which is the best you can hope for. Scroll back to the right as far as you can
go, and you will see your current rating.
Drag the scroll bar slider
back and forth, and you will see the day-to-day flow of the Stability Index as
various events play themselves out.
Notice that the middle
portion of the window is sprinkled with icons divided into labeled rows. Let’s see what they are telling us:
Software (Un)Installs: The yellow
triangle with question marks and the circles with lower case “i”s show the date
or dates when:
● an application was
either installed or uninstalled.
● a driver or driver
update was installed.
● virus definitions
were updated.
Those are the major
examples. This can be very useful
information when trying to troubleshoot a problem.

Application Failures: This is the
area that strongly affects your Reliability Index. Any day that has a red circle with an X drops the Reliability
Index significantly. This is like a
public company announcing a bad earnings report. Its stock can drop dramatically very quickly. The Reliability Index will increase slowly
as long as no other application failures occur. If necessary, you can quickly find any application that’s
trashing your system.
Hardware Failures and Windows Failures: There are hardware and Windows failures so
severe that you may not be able to access the utility until after the problem
is fixed. For less severe troubles, the
tool will tell you about a hard drive failure, modem malfunctions, mouse failures,
and others.
Miscellaneous Failures: This is a
catch-all area that reports problems that don’t fit neatly into any of the
other categories. For example, the
utility will report a situation where Windows did not shut down properly as a
Disruptive Shutdown.
Vista’s Reliability Monitor
makes it easy to track events that affect your system. It’s a great troubleshooting aid because you
can quickly find out what is causing a problem and when it started. The Monitor’s ability to record trend
analysis data, with detailed information about specific events, tells you
everything you need to know about your computer from the day Vista was
installed.
This article has been
provided to APCUG by the author solely for publication by APCUG member groups.
All other uses require the permission of the author (see e-mail address above).