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📄 task list programs-r.mht

📁 常见的windows中出现的进程名称。非常详细
💻 MHT
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programs to=20
                  call each other=92s publicly declared procedures =
(programming=20
                  code) over a network.  From initially being =
little used=20
                  under Windows 95/98/ME, RPCSS  has now become =
essential=20
                  to the proper running of most of the recent versions =
of=20
                  network related Microsoft software (Winsocks, Internet =

                  Explorer, ICS), thus disabling it or deleting it will =
result=20
                  in problems at some point.  Under any Windows =
95/98/ME=20
                  environment with reasonably recent Microsoft software=20
                  installed, RPCSS runs at all times as a transparent =
task=20
                  visible only through &nbsp;<A=20
                  style=3D"FONT-WEIGHT: bold; COLOR: #3333cc"=20
                  =
href=3D"http://www.answersthatwork.com/TUT_pages/TUT_information.htm">The=
=20
                  Ultimate Troubleshooter</A>,&nbsp; while under Windows =

                  NT4/2000/XP/2003&nbsp; RPCSS&nbsp; is a crucial part =
of the=20
                  design of the operating system and deleting/disabling =
this=20
                  program disables the operating=20
                  =
system&nbsp;!<BR><U><BR></U><B>Recommendation&nbsp;:</B><BR><FONT=20
                  size=3D1>Leave well =
alone&nbsp;!</FONT></FONT></P></TD></TR>
              <TR>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"21%" bgColor=3D#99ff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" =
size=3D1><B>Rscmpt</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"25%" bgColor=3D#ccff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial"=20
                  =
size=3D1>Rscmpt.exe<BR><BR><B>(NVidia???)</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"54%" bgColor=3D#ccffcc><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1>Well, well, =
well.&nbsp; What have=20
                  NVidia either done, or allowed to happen&nbsp;?!&nbsp; =
There=20
                  is absolutely nothing positive we can say about this=20
                  task.&nbsp; It goes like this&nbsp;:&nbsp; you =
purchase an=20
                  NVidia chipset card and install the drivers =96 you =
have Windows=20
                  2000.&nbsp; Let=92s say the card is a 64Mb graphics =
card.&nbsp;=20
                  If you install the NVidia drivers from the NVidia =
site, you=20
                  find that your card gets recognised as only a 32Mb =
card.&nbsp;=20
                  If you then decide to install the drivers from the CD =
that=20
                  came with the card, you find that your card gets =
recognised=20
                  successfully but there is a new task running, RSCMPT, =
which=20
                  gobbles up CPU resources, up to 99% sometimes.&nbsp; =
So, to=20
                  summarise&nbsp;:&nbsp; without RSCMPT your card gets=20
                  recognised at boot-up as the card you bought, a 64Mb =
card, but=20
                  when you are in Windows it gets recognised as only =
half that,=20
                  32Mb.&nbsp; On the other hand, with RSCMPT Windows =
recognises=20
                  your card properly but your PC slows down to a=20
                  crawl.<BR><U><BR></U><B>Recommendation&nbsp;:</B>=20
                  <BR>Something is not right, whether with Windows 2000, =
or the=20
                  NVidia chipset under Windows&nbsp;2000, or the =
implementation=20
                  of the NVidia chipset by 3rd party graphics cards=20
                  manufacturers.&nbsp; One thing for sure, something is=20
                  definitely not right with RSCMPT.&nbsp; At the time of =

                  writing, 29-Dec-2002, a search for RSCMPT on the =
NVidia site=20
                  yields nothing, and that is not right as, with so many =
users=20
                  experiencing difficulties, they <I>must know</I> about =
the=20
                  problem (even if it has nothing to do with them, ie. =
it is the=20
                  fault of 3rd party manufacturers, they should be =
issuing a=20
                  statement about it).&nbsp; In our view, if you have =
just=20
                  bought the card and you experience this problem, =
return it and=20
                  get a different one =96 be practical, =
effectively.&nbsp; <I>Note=20
                  that this problem has also been observed on Windows 98 =

                  PCs.</I></FONT></TD></TR>
              <TR>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"21%" bgColor=3D#99ff99 =
height=3D115><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" =
size=3D1><B>Rsrcmtr</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"25%" bgColor=3D#ccff99 =
height=3D115><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial"=20
                  =
size=3D1>RsrcMtr.exe<BR><BR><B>(Microsoft)</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"54%" bgColor=3D#ccffcc =
height=3D115><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1><B>Windows Resource=20
                  Meter.&nbsp;</B> If you have this running in your Task =
List,=20
                  then you should find the Windows Resource Meter icon =
in your=20
                  System Tray.&nbsp; The Resource Meter enables you to =
track how=20
                  your prime resources, System, User, GDI, are used and =
whether=20
                  you are running low on these=20
                  =
resources.<BR><U><BR></U><STRONG>Recommendation&nbsp;:</STRONG>=20
                  <BR>The Resource Meter uses Windows resources itself, =
so only=20
                  ever use it if you are troubleshooting resources =
problems, or=20
                  if you know that a specific type of usage of your PC =
always=20
                  results in resources running dangerously low and you =
want to=20
                  have an early warning mechanism so you are not caught =
out by a=20
                  frozen PC due to exhausted resources.</FONT></TD></TR>
              <TR>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"21%" bgColor=3D#99ff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" =
size=3D1><B>Rstate</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"25%" bgColor=3D#ccff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial"=20
                  size=3D1>RState.exe<BR><BR><B>(Sybase)</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"54%" bgColor=3D#ccffcc><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1>Program which is part =
of Sybase=92s=20
                  <B>Manage Anywhere Studio</B> suite.&nbsp; <I>Manage =
Anywhere=20
                  Studio</I> is a package for distributing, installing =
and=20
                  managing software, data, and files, on remote =
systems.&nbsp;=20
                  RSTATE resides on the client PCs =96 we do not at this =
stage=20
                  know what its exact purpose=20
                  is.<BR><U><BR></U><B>Recommendation&nbsp;:</B> <BR>We =
can only=20
                  recommend to leave it alone as we do not yet know what =
this=20
                  task does.</FONT></TD></TR>
              <TR>
                <TD=20
                style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; BACKGROUND-POSITION: 0% 0%; =
PADDING-LEFT: 0px; BACKGROUND-ATTACHMENT: scroll; BACKGROUND-IMAGE: =
url(none); PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; PADDING-TOP: 0px; BACKGROUND-REPEAT: =
repeat"=20
                vAlign=3Dtop width=3D113 bgColor=3D#99ff99>
                  <P class=3DMsoNormal style=3D"MARGIN: 4pt =
5.65pt"><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1><B>Rsvp<BR><BR>QoS=20
                  RSVP</B></FONT></P></TD>
                <TD=20
                style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; =
PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; PADDING-TOP: 0px"=20
                vAlign=3Dtop width=3D132 bgColor=3D#ccff99>
                  <P class=3DMsoNormal style=3D"MARGIN: 4pt =
5.65pt"><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial"=20
                  =
size=3D1>RSVP.exe<BR><BR><B>(Microsoft)</B></FONT></P></TD>
                <TD=20
                style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 0px; =
PADDING-BOTTOM: 0px; PADDING-TOP: 0px"=20
                vAlign=3Dtop width=3D293 bgColor=3D#ccffcc>
                  <P class=3DMsoNormal style=3D"MARGIN: 4pt =
5.65pt"><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1>Resource Reservation =
Protocol=20
                  (RSVP) is a signalling technique used to guarantee =
quality of=20
                  service (QoS) by reserving bandwidth for RSVP-capable =
data=20
                  flows.&nbsp; Typical applications would be video and =
audio=20
                  streaming between servers or between a server and a =
specific=20
                  PC, such as a demonstration PC in a conference =
room.&nbsp; All=20
                  PCs in the data path must be RSVP compliant for a =
guaranteed=20
                  QoS =96 ie. they must all have RSVP running, which =
instantly=20
                  eliminates Win9x/ME/NT4 PCs.&nbsp; A typical =
reservation flow=20
                  is initiated by sending a PATH message downstream to =
the=20
                  receiver.&nbsp; Each PC in the data path establishes a =
PATH=20
                  state, to maintain the appropriate QoS.&nbsp; A PATH =
message=20
                  states the flow ID, reservation information, and the =
source=20
                  and destination address.&nbsp; Once the PATH message =
reaches=20
                  the destination PC, the request is handled by the =
local RSVP=20
                  process, RSVP.EXE, which processes the request for =
validity in=20
                  terms of whether it has the available resources to =
satisfy the=20
                  request and whether the originator has permission to =
make the=20
                  request in the first place.&nbsp; The RSVP process =
then either=20
                  sends back an error response to the sender, or the =
appropriate=20
                  QoS is implemented.&nbsp; A RESV message is then sent =
upstream=20
                  from the receiver to each PC in the reverse data =
path.&nbsp;=20
                  The RESV message uses the same flow information used =
in the=20
                  PATH message.&nbsp; Routers along the path commit to =
the=20
                  reservation and then store the information in a flow=20
                  table.&nbsp; This process is repeated until the sender =
gets=20
                  the RESV message.&nbsp; The reservation is then set =
up.&nbsp;=20
                  Once the sender and receiver have completed their =
intended=20
                  tasks with the reserved data flow, a PathTear message =
is sent=20
                  to break the guaranteed bandwidth connection.&nbsp; At =
that=20
                  point resources are then released by all PCs in the =
bandwidth=20
                  path so they can be used in a later=20
                  =
reservation.<U><BR><BR></U><B>Recommendation&nbsp;:</B><FONT=20
                  size=3D1>&nbsp;&nbsp; <BR>Unless this service has been =
set up by=20
                  your Network Administrator, you do <U>not</U> need to =
have it=20
                  running.&nbsp; Similarly, if this PC is not on a =
network, you=20
                  definitely do <U>not</U> need this service =
running.&nbsp; If=20
                  you are on a network, consult therefore with your =
Network=20
                  Administrator, otherwise disable this service by =
setting=20
                  the&nbsp; <B>RSVP</B>&nbsp; service to&nbsp;=20
                  <U>Manual</U>&nbsp; in&nbsp; </FONT><I><FONT =
size=3D1>=93Control=20
                  Panel&nbsp;\ Administrative Tools&nbsp;\=20
                  Services=94.</FONT></I></FONT></P></TD></TR>
              <TR>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"21%" bgColor=3D#99ff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" =
size=3D1><B>Rtfixm32</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"25%" bgColor=3D#ccff99><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial"=20
                  size=3D1>RtFixM32.exe<BR><B><BR>(Cybermedia Inc, now=20
                  McAfee)</B></FONT></TD>
                <TD vAlign=3Dtop width=3D"54%" bgColor=3D#ccffcc><FONT=20
                  face=3D"Verdana, Arial" size=3D1>Part of First Aid 98. =
Read=20
                  FA_GD32 for more=20
                  details.<BR><U><BR></U><B>Recommendation&nbsp;:</B>=20
                  <BR>RTFIXM32 is often the cause of shutdown problems =
and=20
                  freezes.&nbsp; If after reading FA_GD32 you decide to =
keep=20
                  First Aid 98, you should at least disable RTFIXM32 =
with=20

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