![]() ![]() First, I got meaning of events in Microsoft-Windows-Diagnostics-Performance: Event ID Unfortunately, I didn’t find a detailed documentation about all these events, so I did some research. The only way to display these parameters is to double click on the event to display event properties and switch to XML tab. Another observation – theses events contain many important parameters internally, but you can’t see them in the event description (Windows Event Viewer doesn’t display them as well). It looks like these event types depend on the duration of the startup/shutdown process. ![]() As you can see, events with the same event ID may have different types – Warning, Error and Critical. Now you can see a list of different diagnostic events. In Event Log Explorer you can do it easier: open your computer in the tree, then open Microsoft-Windows folder and then click Microsoft-Windows-Diagnostics-Performance/Operational. To open this log in Windows Event Viewer, open Applications and Services Logs branch, then open Microsoft, then open Windows, then select Diagnostics-Performance and click on Operational. Windows records performance diagnostics events into Microsoft-Windows-Diagnostics-Performance/Operational event log. In Windows Event Viewer, these logs are located in a special branch: “Applications and Services Logs”. Starting from Windows Vista, Microsoft provides a bunch of event logs for different system purposes. ![]() Maybe you observe performance issues when shutdown or hibernate process? In this article, I will show you how you can use Event Log Explorer to find performance problems linked with the startup/shutdown/hibernate/resume processes. Have you ever seen that your computer starts booting slowly? Or it slowly restores its state from hibernation. ![]()
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