High DPC latency Windows 10, unable to fix











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Edit: I am still experiencing this issue. ndis.sys is causing issues and I have not been able to resolve it. I am at a loss of what to do. I have tried reinstalling windows AGAIN, reinstalling drivers and disabling throttling, nothing works.



I've had problems with Windows10 regarding DPC latency for a good while now, I've managed to relieve some of the issues but my computer still cannot process in real time according to latencymon.



I get audio crackling along with jaw dropping frame skipping and generally slow behaviour.



The main culprit is ndis.sys and also sometimes dxgkrnl.sys when playing games. I have yet to find out what is causing this problem, I've tried reinstalling wifi drivers, not using wifi (using LAN instead) and it still gives me latency.



Here are a few pastebins with my information:



My driver query: http://pastebin.com/UfN2Y9QV



My directX diagnostics: http://pastebin.com/j2wg7ugG



My latencymon results: http://pastebin.com/hFUPMe2A



It is important to note that Windows 8, the system this device came with had no issues, but whenever I downgrade to windows 8 now the same issues persist. I would rather fix the root of the problem instead of downgrading.



My device is an ASUS G771JM laptop.










share|improve this question
























  • update all network and graphic drivers
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:30










  • @magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:31










  • share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:32










  • have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '17 at 19:14










  • Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 30 '17 at 20:10















up vote
7
down vote

favorite
3












Edit: I am still experiencing this issue. ndis.sys is causing issues and I have not been able to resolve it. I am at a loss of what to do. I have tried reinstalling windows AGAIN, reinstalling drivers and disabling throttling, nothing works.



I've had problems with Windows10 regarding DPC latency for a good while now, I've managed to relieve some of the issues but my computer still cannot process in real time according to latencymon.



I get audio crackling along with jaw dropping frame skipping and generally slow behaviour.



The main culprit is ndis.sys and also sometimes dxgkrnl.sys when playing games. I have yet to find out what is causing this problem, I've tried reinstalling wifi drivers, not using wifi (using LAN instead) and it still gives me latency.



Here are a few pastebins with my information:



My driver query: http://pastebin.com/UfN2Y9QV



My directX diagnostics: http://pastebin.com/j2wg7ugG



My latencymon results: http://pastebin.com/hFUPMe2A



It is important to note that Windows 8, the system this device came with had no issues, but whenever I downgrade to windows 8 now the same issues persist. I would rather fix the root of the problem instead of downgrading.



My device is an ASUS G771JM laptop.










share|improve this question
























  • update all network and graphic drivers
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:30










  • @magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:31










  • share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:32










  • have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '17 at 19:14










  • Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 30 '17 at 20:10













up vote
7
down vote

favorite
3









up vote
7
down vote

favorite
3






3





Edit: I am still experiencing this issue. ndis.sys is causing issues and I have not been able to resolve it. I am at a loss of what to do. I have tried reinstalling windows AGAIN, reinstalling drivers and disabling throttling, nothing works.



I've had problems with Windows10 regarding DPC latency for a good while now, I've managed to relieve some of the issues but my computer still cannot process in real time according to latencymon.



I get audio crackling along with jaw dropping frame skipping and generally slow behaviour.



The main culprit is ndis.sys and also sometimes dxgkrnl.sys when playing games. I have yet to find out what is causing this problem, I've tried reinstalling wifi drivers, not using wifi (using LAN instead) and it still gives me latency.



Here are a few pastebins with my information:



My driver query: http://pastebin.com/UfN2Y9QV



My directX diagnostics: http://pastebin.com/j2wg7ugG



My latencymon results: http://pastebin.com/hFUPMe2A



It is important to note that Windows 8, the system this device came with had no issues, but whenever I downgrade to windows 8 now the same issues persist. I would rather fix the root of the problem instead of downgrading.



My device is an ASUS G771JM laptop.










share|improve this question















Edit: I am still experiencing this issue. ndis.sys is causing issues and I have not been able to resolve it. I am at a loss of what to do. I have tried reinstalling windows AGAIN, reinstalling drivers and disabling throttling, nothing works.



I've had problems with Windows10 regarding DPC latency for a good while now, I've managed to relieve some of the issues but my computer still cannot process in real time according to latencymon.



I get audio crackling along with jaw dropping frame skipping and generally slow behaviour.



The main culprit is ndis.sys and also sometimes dxgkrnl.sys when playing games. I have yet to find out what is causing this problem, I've tried reinstalling wifi drivers, not using wifi (using LAN instead) and it still gives me latency.



Here are a few pastebins with my information:



My driver query: http://pastebin.com/UfN2Y9QV



My directX diagnostics: http://pastebin.com/j2wg7ugG



My latencymon results: http://pastebin.com/hFUPMe2A



It is important to note that Windows 8, the system this device came with had no issues, but whenever I downgrade to windows 8 now the same issues persist. I would rather fix the root of the problem instead of downgrading.



My device is an ASUS G771JM laptop.







windows-10 latency dpc






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edited May 13 '17 at 21:32

























asked Jan 29 '17 at 13:11









Sebastian Olsen

1301513




1301513












  • update all network and graphic drivers
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:30










  • @magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:31










  • share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:32










  • have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '17 at 19:14










  • Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 30 '17 at 20:10


















  • update all network and graphic drivers
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:30










  • @magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:31










  • share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 29 '17 at 20:32










  • have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 30 '17 at 19:14










  • Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 30 '17 at 20:10
















update all network and graphic drivers
– magicandre1981
Jan 29 '17 at 20:30




update all network and graphic drivers
– magicandre1981
Jan 29 '17 at 20:30












@magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
– Sebastian Olsen
Jan 29 '17 at 20:31




@magicandre1981 and what do you think I haven't tried already?
– Sebastian Olsen
Jan 29 '17 at 20:31












share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
– magicandre1981
Jan 29 '17 at 20:32




share the zipped ETL file which is captured by this script: blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/matthew_van_eerde/2017/01/09/… run it while you hear the audio issues
– magicandre1981
Jan 29 '17 at 20:32












have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
– magicandre1981
Jan 30 '17 at 19:14




have you captured the trace while you see the audio glitches?
– magicandre1981
Jan 30 '17 at 19:14












Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
– Sebastian Olsen
Jan 30 '17 at 20:10




Here: drive.google.com/open?id=0ByHHdTt4Dl1qNzlJemRRWVR6djA
– Sebastian Olsen
Jan 30 '17 at 20:10










4 Answers
4






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up vote
0
down vote













Looking at the log shows indeed ndis.sys and nvlddmkm.sys spikes:



Total = 98101 for module nvlddmkm.sys
Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 68, or 0.07%
Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 13, or 0.01%
Total, 98101

Total = 2703 for module ndis.sys
Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 103, or 3.81%
Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 19, or 0.70%
Total, 2703


Looking at the stacks shows that NDIS.sys calls your Intel Wifi driver



Line #, DPC/ISR, Module, Stack, Count, Process, Weight (in view) (ms), TimeStamp (s), % Weight
14, , ndis.sys, [Root], 25, , 23,699083, , 0,01
15, , , |- ntoskrnl.exe!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd, 5, , 4,746332, , 0,00
16, , , | |- ntoskrnl.exe!NtSetIoCompletion, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
17, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IoSetIoCompletionEx2, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
18, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IopAllocateMiniCompletionPacket, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
19, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiInterruptDispatchNoLockNoEtw, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
20, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDpcInterruptBypass, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
21, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDispatchInterruptContinue, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
22, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KxRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
23, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
24, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiExecuteAllDpcs, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
25, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisPeriodicReceivesTimer, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
26, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisQueuedMiniportDpcWorkItem, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
27, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
28, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
29, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
30, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
31, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
32, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
33, , , | | ndis.sys!NdisMIndicateReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
34, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisCallReceiveHandler, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
35, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMTopReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
36, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMIndicateNetBufferListsToOpen, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00


You use driver version 18.33.5.1 which is the latest version for your Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 adapter. Wait for newer drivers, replace the adapter with a different model (a Gamer Wifi adapter from Killer or newer Intel model) or use LAN cable connection.



Your nVIDIA GPU driver nvlddmkm.sys is version 376.19, which is a bit outdated. Try the driver 378.49 which the most recent one (as 2017-01-31) for your Geforce 860M.






share|improve this answer





















  • This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:08










  • it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:10










  • on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:14










  • This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:48










  • during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 19:36


















up vote
0
down vote













I have had this problem fairly recently,
and I solved it by blowing away the system-managed swap file
and setting a fixed, 8192 MB file instead
(the previous one seemed to be an odd size of 1.5-5.2 GB,
which didn’t make a lot of sense). 
Anyway – reboot and CPU is running much lower and no stuttering of audio,
all the same programs and devices as before. 
Previously I’d get it with the onboard audio via the speakers
or via the external Fiio which is its own device –
but now no problems at all, all since replacing and size-fixing the swap file.



Background



My system specifications:




  • Dell Latitude e6230

  • Core i5 (2x core) with 8gig of RAM and a 512gig SSD just with onboard HD4000

  • onboard audio (as well as an external USB Fiio E17 DAC)
    and the dreaded Intel 7260 Wi-Fi/bt card and

  • stock Intel gigabit Ethernet

  • OS is Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit


As I mentioned, I have had this problem fairly recently, past few weeks only – the system had been running Windows 7 Pro, 64-bit for nearly 3 years and I'd never experienced this DPC issue on either this or any other systems.



LatencyMon was showing TCPIP.SYS as the main lag driver.



I remember in earlier times fixing the swap file to a set amount to avoid file growth/shrinkage was a useful performance measure, but thought it’d matter less with SSDs; but this seems to have been caused by problems with the former swap file. I’ve just done this so it has not had long to re-fault, but it was re-faulting by now on every other boot and remedy cycle so I have a feeling this is a big part of the problem (at least in this case).






share|improve this answer























  • Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    May 13 '17 at 21:32


















up vote
0
down vote













Try the following commands in an elevated command prompt (cmd.exe run as an administrator), to reset the IP state and log files. It helped me (temporarily) with my latency problems:



ipconfig /release
ipconfig /renew
netsh winsock reset catalog
netsh int ip reset reset.log


Hope it helps!






share|improve this answer























  • You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Jul 11 '17 at 14:18


















up vote
0
down vote













Your last resort IMHO is to experiment with these options, both on wired and wireless adapter. I am on mobile, so the following is a phone screenshot.



Not sure what options would help, playing with anything to do with interrupts or offloading may be worthwhile.



enter image description here






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    4 Answers
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    4 Answers
    4






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    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Looking at the log shows indeed ndis.sys and nvlddmkm.sys spikes:



    Total = 98101 for module nvlddmkm.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 68, or 0.07%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 13, or 0.01%
    Total, 98101

    Total = 2703 for module ndis.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 103, or 3.81%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 19, or 0.70%
    Total, 2703


    Looking at the stacks shows that NDIS.sys calls your Intel Wifi driver



    Line #, DPC/ISR, Module, Stack, Count, Process, Weight (in view) (ms), TimeStamp (s), % Weight
    14, , ndis.sys, [Root], 25, , 23,699083, , 0,01
    15, , , |- ntoskrnl.exe!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd, 5, , 4,746332, , 0,00
    16, , , | |- ntoskrnl.exe!NtSetIoCompletion, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    17, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IoSetIoCompletionEx2, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    18, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IopAllocateMiniCompletionPacket, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    19, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiInterruptDispatchNoLockNoEtw, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    20, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDpcInterruptBypass, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    21, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDispatchInterruptContinue, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    22, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KxRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    23, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    24, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiExecuteAllDpcs, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    25, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisPeriodicReceivesTimer, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    26, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisQueuedMiniportDpcWorkItem, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    27, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    28, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    29, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    30, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    31, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    32, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    33, , , | | ndis.sys!NdisMIndicateReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    34, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisCallReceiveHandler, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    35, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMTopReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    36, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMIndicateNetBufferListsToOpen, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00


    You use driver version 18.33.5.1 which is the latest version for your Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 adapter. Wait for newer drivers, replace the adapter with a different model (a Gamer Wifi adapter from Killer or newer Intel model) or use LAN cable connection.



    Your nVIDIA GPU driver nvlddmkm.sys is version 376.19, which is a bit outdated. Try the driver 378.49 which the most recent one (as 2017-01-31) for your Geforce 860M.






    share|improve this answer





















    • This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:08










    • it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:10










    • on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:14










    • This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:48










    • during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 19:36















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Looking at the log shows indeed ndis.sys and nvlddmkm.sys spikes:



    Total = 98101 for module nvlddmkm.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 68, or 0.07%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 13, or 0.01%
    Total, 98101

    Total = 2703 for module ndis.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 103, or 3.81%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 19, or 0.70%
    Total, 2703


    Looking at the stacks shows that NDIS.sys calls your Intel Wifi driver



    Line #, DPC/ISR, Module, Stack, Count, Process, Weight (in view) (ms), TimeStamp (s), % Weight
    14, , ndis.sys, [Root], 25, , 23,699083, , 0,01
    15, , , |- ntoskrnl.exe!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd, 5, , 4,746332, , 0,00
    16, , , | |- ntoskrnl.exe!NtSetIoCompletion, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    17, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IoSetIoCompletionEx2, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    18, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IopAllocateMiniCompletionPacket, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    19, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiInterruptDispatchNoLockNoEtw, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    20, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDpcInterruptBypass, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    21, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDispatchInterruptContinue, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    22, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KxRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    23, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    24, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiExecuteAllDpcs, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    25, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisPeriodicReceivesTimer, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    26, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisQueuedMiniportDpcWorkItem, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    27, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    28, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    29, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    30, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    31, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    32, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    33, , , | | ndis.sys!NdisMIndicateReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    34, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisCallReceiveHandler, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    35, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMTopReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    36, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMIndicateNetBufferListsToOpen, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00


    You use driver version 18.33.5.1 which is the latest version for your Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 adapter. Wait for newer drivers, replace the adapter with a different model (a Gamer Wifi adapter from Killer or newer Intel model) or use LAN cable connection.



    Your nVIDIA GPU driver nvlddmkm.sys is version 376.19, which is a bit outdated. Try the driver 378.49 which the most recent one (as 2017-01-31) for your Geforce 860M.






    share|improve this answer





















    • This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:08










    • it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:10










    • on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:14










    • This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:48










    • during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 19:36













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    Looking at the log shows indeed ndis.sys and nvlddmkm.sys spikes:



    Total = 98101 for module nvlddmkm.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 68, or 0.07%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 13, or 0.01%
    Total, 98101

    Total = 2703 for module ndis.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 103, or 3.81%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 19, or 0.70%
    Total, 2703


    Looking at the stacks shows that NDIS.sys calls your Intel Wifi driver



    Line #, DPC/ISR, Module, Stack, Count, Process, Weight (in view) (ms), TimeStamp (s), % Weight
    14, , ndis.sys, [Root], 25, , 23,699083, , 0,01
    15, , , |- ntoskrnl.exe!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd, 5, , 4,746332, , 0,00
    16, , , | |- ntoskrnl.exe!NtSetIoCompletion, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    17, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IoSetIoCompletionEx2, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    18, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IopAllocateMiniCompletionPacket, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    19, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiInterruptDispatchNoLockNoEtw, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    20, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDpcInterruptBypass, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    21, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDispatchInterruptContinue, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    22, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KxRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    23, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    24, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiExecuteAllDpcs, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    25, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisPeriodicReceivesTimer, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    26, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisQueuedMiniportDpcWorkItem, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    27, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    28, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    29, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    30, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    31, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    32, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    33, , , | | ndis.sys!NdisMIndicateReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    34, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisCallReceiveHandler, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    35, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMTopReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    36, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMIndicateNetBufferListsToOpen, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00


    You use driver version 18.33.5.1 which is the latest version for your Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 adapter. Wait for newer drivers, replace the adapter with a different model (a Gamer Wifi adapter from Killer or newer Intel model) or use LAN cable connection.



    Your nVIDIA GPU driver nvlddmkm.sys is version 376.19, which is a bit outdated. Try the driver 378.49 which the most recent one (as 2017-01-31) for your Geforce 860M.






    share|improve this answer












    Looking at the log shows indeed ndis.sys and nvlddmkm.sys spikes:



    Total = 98101 for module nvlddmkm.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 68, or 0.07%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 13, or 0.01%
    Total, 98101

    Total = 2703 for module ndis.sys
    Elapsed Time, > 512 usecs AND <= 1024 usecs, 103, or 3.81%
    Elapsed Time, > 1024 usecs AND <= 2048 usecs, 19, or 0.70%
    Total, 2703


    Looking at the stacks shows that NDIS.sys calls your Intel Wifi driver



    Line #, DPC/ISR, Module, Stack, Count, Process, Weight (in view) (ms), TimeStamp (s), % Weight
    14, , ndis.sys, [Root], 25, , 23,699083, , 0,01
    15, , , |- ntoskrnl.exe!KiSystemServiceCopyEnd, 5, , 4,746332, , 0,00
    16, , , | |- ntoskrnl.exe!NtSetIoCompletion, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    17, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IoSetIoCompletionEx2, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    18, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!IopAllocateMiniCompletionPacket, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    19, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiInterruptDispatchNoLockNoEtw, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    20, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDpcInterruptBypass, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    21, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiDispatchInterruptContinue, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    22, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KxRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    23, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiRetireDpcList, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    24, , , | | ntoskrnl.exe!KiExecuteAllDpcs, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    25, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisPeriodicReceivesTimer, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    26, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisQueuedMiniportDpcWorkItem, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    27, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    28, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    29, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    30, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    31, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    32, , , | | Netwbw02.sys!<PDB not found>, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    33, , , | | ndis.sys!NdisMIndicateReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    34, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisCallReceiveHandler, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    35, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMTopReceiveNetBufferLists, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00
    36, , , | | ndis.sys!ndisMIndicateNetBufferListsToOpen, 1, , 1,016103, , 0,00


    You use driver version 18.33.5.1 which is the latest version for your Intel(R) Dual Band Wireless-AC 7260 adapter. Wait for newer drivers, replace the adapter with a different model (a Gamer Wifi adapter from Killer or newer Intel model) or use LAN cable connection.



    Your nVIDIA GPU driver nvlddmkm.sys is version 376.19, which is a bit outdated. Try the driver 378.49 which the most recent one (as 2017-01-31) for your Geforce 860M.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Jan 31 '17 at 16:55









    magicandre1981

    80.8k20123200




    80.8k20123200












    • This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:08










    • it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:10










    • on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:14










    • This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:48










    • during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 19:36


















    • This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:08










    • it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:10










    • on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:14










    • This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      Jan 31 '17 at 17:48










    • during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
      – magicandre1981
      Jan 31 '17 at 19:36
















    This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:08




    This is a laptop, there is no way for me to replace the wireless adapter, is there absolutely no way to fix the latency it is causing? This laptop isn't even that old.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:08












    it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:10




    it is possible. I could remove the adapter on my dell laptop. check if it a PCIe Mini Card based adapter or fixed to the motherboard.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:10












    on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:14




    on this picture I can see it is possible to remove it: i2.wp.com/laptopmedia.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/…
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:14












    This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:48




    This seems sketchy, is there absolutely no way to fix the network drivers as is? I refuse to believe that hardware like this should be struggling basic tasks such as 2D gaming and YouTube.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    Jan 31 '17 at 17:48












    during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 19:36




    during DPC everything is blocked in windows and the longer it takes, you see sound issues. Intel must update the drivers to reduce the process time of the DPCs.
    – magicandre1981
    Jan 31 '17 at 19:36












    up vote
    0
    down vote













    I have had this problem fairly recently,
    and I solved it by blowing away the system-managed swap file
    and setting a fixed, 8192 MB file instead
    (the previous one seemed to be an odd size of 1.5-5.2 GB,
    which didn’t make a lot of sense). 
    Anyway – reboot and CPU is running much lower and no stuttering of audio,
    all the same programs and devices as before. 
    Previously I’d get it with the onboard audio via the speakers
    or via the external Fiio which is its own device –
    but now no problems at all, all since replacing and size-fixing the swap file.



    Background



    My system specifications:




    • Dell Latitude e6230

    • Core i5 (2x core) with 8gig of RAM and a 512gig SSD just with onboard HD4000

    • onboard audio (as well as an external USB Fiio E17 DAC)
      and the dreaded Intel 7260 Wi-Fi/bt card and

    • stock Intel gigabit Ethernet

    • OS is Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit


    As I mentioned, I have had this problem fairly recently, past few weeks only – the system had been running Windows 7 Pro, 64-bit for nearly 3 years and I'd never experienced this DPC issue on either this or any other systems.



    LatencyMon was showing TCPIP.SYS as the main lag driver.



    I remember in earlier times fixing the swap file to a set amount to avoid file growth/shrinkage was a useful performance measure, but thought it’d matter less with SSDs; but this seems to have been caused by problems with the former swap file. I’ve just done this so it has not had long to re-fault, but it was re-faulting by now on every other boot and remedy cycle so I have a feeling this is a big part of the problem (at least in this case).






    share|improve this answer























    • Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      May 13 '17 at 21:32















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    I have had this problem fairly recently,
    and I solved it by blowing away the system-managed swap file
    and setting a fixed, 8192 MB file instead
    (the previous one seemed to be an odd size of 1.5-5.2 GB,
    which didn’t make a lot of sense). 
    Anyway – reboot and CPU is running much lower and no stuttering of audio,
    all the same programs and devices as before. 
    Previously I’d get it with the onboard audio via the speakers
    or via the external Fiio which is its own device –
    but now no problems at all, all since replacing and size-fixing the swap file.



    Background



    My system specifications:




    • Dell Latitude e6230

    • Core i5 (2x core) with 8gig of RAM and a 512gig SSD just with onboard HD4000

    • onboard audio (as well as an external USB Fiio E17 DAC)
      and the dreaded Intel 7260 Wi-Fi/bt card and

    • stock Intel gigabit Ethernet

    • OS is Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit


    As I mentioned, I have had this problem fairly recently, past few weeks only – the system had been running Windows 7 Pro, 64-bit for nearly 3 years and I'd never experienced this DPC issue on either this or any other systems.



    LatencyMon was showing TCPIP.SYS as the main lag driver.



    I remember in earlier times fixing the swap file to a set amount to avoid file growth/shrinkage was a useful performance measure, but thought it’d matter less with SSDs; but this seems to have been caused by problems with the former swap file. I’ve just done this so it has not had long to re-fault, but it was re-faulting by now on every other boot and remedy cycle so I have a feeling this is a big part of the problem (at least in this case).






    share|improve this answer























    • Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      May 13 '17 at 21:32













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    I have had this problem fairly recently,
    and I solved it by blowing away the system-managed swap file
    and setting a fixed, 8192 MB file instead
    (the previous one seemed to be an odd size of 1.5-5.2 GB,
    which didn’t make a lot of sense). 
    Anyway – reboot and CPU is running much lower and no stuttering of audio,
    all the same programs and devices as before. 
    Previously I’d get it with the onboard audio via the speakers
    or via the external Fiio which is its own device –
    but now no problems at all, all since replacing and size-fixing the swap file.



    Background



    My system specifications:




    • Dell Latitude e6230

    • Core i5 (2x core) with 8gig of RAM and a 512gig SSD just with onboard HD4000

    • onboard audio (as well as an external USB Fiio E17 DAC)
      and the dreaded Intel 7260 Wi-Fi/bt card and

    • stock Intel gigabit Ethernet

    • OS is Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit


    As I mentioned, I have had this problem fairly recently, past few weeks only – the system had been running Windows 7 Pro, 64-bit for nearly 3 years and I'd never experienced this DPC issue on either this or any other systems.



    LatencyMon was showing TCPIP.SYS as the main lag driver.



    I remember in earlier times fixing the swap file to a set amount to avoid file growth/shrinkage was a useful performance measure, but thought it’d matter less with SSDs; but this seems to have been caused by problems with the former swap file. I’ve just done this so it has not had long to re-fault, but it was re-faulting by now on every other boot and remedy cycle so I have a feeling this is a big part of the problem (at least in this case).






    share|improve this answer














    I have had this problem fairly recently,
    and I solved it by blowing away the system-managed swap file
    and setting a fixed, 8192 MB file instead
    (the previous one seemed to be an odd size of 1.5-5.2 GB,
    which didn’t make a lot of sense). 
    Anyway – reboot and CPU is running much lower and no stuttering of audio,
    all the same programs and devices as before. 
    Previously I’d get it with the onboard audio via the speakers
    or via the external Fiio which is its own device –
    but now no problems at all, all since replacing and size-fixing the swap file.



    Background



    My system specifications:




    • Dell Latitude e6230

    • Core i5 (2x core) with 8gig of RAM and a 512gig SSD just with onboard HD4000

    • onboard audio (as well as an external USB Fiio E17 DAC)
      and the dreaded Intel 7260 Wi-Fi/bt card and

    • stock Intel gigabit Ethernet

    • OS is Windows 10 Professional, 64-bit


    As I mentioned, I have had this problem fairly recently, past few weeks only – the system had been running Windows 7 Pro, 64-bit for nearly 3 years and I'd never experienced this DPC issue on either this or any other systems.



    LatencyMon was showing TCPIP.SYS as the main lag driver.



    I remember in earlier times fixing the swap file to a set amount to avoid file growth/shrinkage was a useful performance measure, but thought it’d matter less with SSDs; but this seems to have been caused by problems with the former swap file. I’ve just done this so it has not had long to re-fault, but it was re-faulting by now on every other boot and remedy cycle so I have a feeling this is a big part of the problem (at least in this case).







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Apr 10 '17 at 18:31









    Scott

    15.4k113789




    15.4k113789










    answered Apr 10 '17 at 16:15









    Davo-cc

    1




    1












    • Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      May 13 '17 at 21:32


















    • Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
      – Sebastian Olsen
      May 13 '17 at 21:32
















    Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    May 13 '17 at 21:32




    Hey there, I've tried what you did, but it did not resolve my issue.
    – Sebastian Olsen
    May 13 '17 at 21:32










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Try the following commands in an elevated command prompt (cmd.exe run as an administrator), to reset the IP state and log files. It helped me (temporarily) with my latency problems:



    ipconfig /release
    ipconfig /renew
    netsh winsock reset catalog
    netsh int ip reset reset.log


    Hope it helps!






    share|improve this answer























    • You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Jul 11 '17 at 14:18















    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Try the following commands in an elevated command prompt (cmd.exe run as an administrator), to reset the IP state and log files. It helped me (temporarily) with my latency problems:



    ipconfig /release
    ipconfig /renew
    netsh winsock reset catalog
    netsh int ip reset reset.log


    Hope it helps!






    share|improve this answer























    • You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Jul 11 '17 at 14:18













    up vote
    0
    down vote










    up vote
    0
    down vote









    Try the following commands in an elevated command prompt (cmd.exe run as an administrator), to reset the IP state and log files. It helped me (temporarily) with my latency problems:



    ipconfig /release
    ipconfig /renew
    netsh winsock reset catalog
    netsh int ip reset reset.log


    Hope it helps!






    share|improve this answer














    Try the following commands in an elevated command prompt (cmd.exe run as an administrator), to reset the IP state and log files. It helped me (temporarily) with my latency problems:



    ipconfig /release
    ipconfig /renew
    netsh winsock reset catalog
    netsh int ip reset reset.log


    Hope it helps!







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Oct 1 '17 at 3:44









    phuclv

    8,82063788




    8,82063788










    answered Jul 11 '17 at 11:45









    Lampros Fotiadis

    12




    12












    • You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Jul 11 '17 at 14:18


















    • You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
      – Pimp Juice IT
      Jul 11 '17 at 14:18
















    You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Jul 11 '17 at 14:18




    You might edit and code block the code and put some reference for the commands you are using.
    – Pimp Juice IT
    Jul 11 '17 at 14:18










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    Your last resort IMHO is to experiment with these options, both on wired and wireless adapter. I am on mobile, so the following is a phone screenshot.



    Not sure what options would help, playing with anything to do with interrupts or offloading may be worthwhile.



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      Your last resort IMHO is to experiment with these options, both on wired and wireless adapter. I am on mobile, so the following is a phone screenshot.



      Not sure what options would help, playing with anything to do with interrupts or offloading may be worthwhile.



      enter image description here






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        Your last resort IMHO is to experiment with these options, both on wired and wireless adapter. I am on mobile, so the following is a phone screenshot.



        Not sure what options would help, playing with anything to do with interrupts or offloading may be worthwhile.



        enter image description here






        share|improve this answer












        Your last resort IMHO is to experiment with these options, both on wired and wireless adapter. I am on mobile, so the following is a phone screenshot.



        Not sure what options would help, playing with anything to do with interrupts or offloading may be worthwhile.



        enter image description here







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Jun 17 at 17:34









        LawrenceC

        58.4k10100178




        58.4k10100178






























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            flock() on closed filehandle LOCK_FILE at /usr/bin/apt-mirror

            Mangá

            Eduardo VII do Reino Unido