You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 10 and has an application named App1.
You need to use Performance Monitor to collect data about the processor utilization of App1.
Which performance object should you monitor?
You have a computer named Computer1 that runs Windows 10 and has an application named App1.
You need to use Performance Monitor to collect data about the processor utilization of App1.
Which performance object should you monitor?
To monitor the processor utilization of a specific application using Performance Monitor in Windows 10, you should monitor the 'Process' performance object. This object allows you to select individual processes (such as App1) and track their processor time and other related metrics. The 'Processor' object, on the other hand, provides information about the overall CPU usage, while 'Processor Performance' and 'Processor Information' give details about CPU metrics that are not specific to individual applications.
Actually, I think this needs to be A. Process. If I open Perfomance monitor and select 'Process' from the available counters, it lets mee select and running application at the 'Instances of the selected object' windows. Once added, the processor time is available to monitor.
it's A) process. Open Performance Monitor. Click "add" (cross symbol) Under Process you find %Processor Time Then you can select e.g. PowerPoint and you see....
This is wrong on win 10 platform it is in processor information that you can see the utilisation
100 % - A is the correct answer - For example if the App you are looking at is OneDrive. Open Perfmon then , click on Green Plus sign , then browse to the available counters - you will see Process, Processor Information and Processor Performance. The questions asks for App1 so in the example if you look Process you will see all the Apps on your laptop -eg One drive . Question is now asking about Processor Information - its about the App.
The answer is A, Process. Try it yourself in the Lab, when you want to find the Performance data of a specific application you have to choose process -> choose process -> then select the counters you care about.
Performance Monitor/Performance Monitor/Add/Process Thats what I think.
It ask for the App1 info, which under process, it monitors running application program and system processes
This answer tells you what you need. https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/windows/en-US/42afb7cd-6cb6-463c-b385-21a97162e3f5/monitoring-cpu-usage-of-individual-processes?forum=winservergen