In this post I’ll explain the first two menus: File and Options, just to avoid to make it too long: Now, let’s analyse the Menu Bar we can see 8 menu items: File, Options, View, Process, Find, Handle, Users and Help. The main window lists the processes running on the machine and the last window shows (depending on how you configure it) the DLLs or the Handles associated to the process we highlight. On the top part we have the standard Menu bar and Toolbar. In this image we can see Process Explorer’s appearance: Please support us by using Babylon search engine Next step is to describe the View and the Proces menus… Hope this will happen soon! The default is 1 second.įont… – Choose the font that the software will use. For example, to have symbols download to the c:symbols directory you would enter this string:Ĭonfigure Highlighting – Use it to define which colors you want to assign to every kind of processesĭifference Highlight Duration – Define how much time will the new processes appears in green and the closing/killed ones in red. Open the Configure Symbols dialog and specify the path to the dbghelp.dll that’s in the Debugging Tools directory and have the symbol engine download symbols on demand from Microsoft to a directory on your disk by entering a symbol server string for the symbol path. On Windows NT and higher, if you want Process Explorer to resolve addresses for thread start addresses in the threads tab of the process properties dialog and the thread stack window then configure symbols by first downloading the Debugging Tools for Windows package from Microsoft’s web site and installing it in its default directory. The Process Explorer will show Trusted (if it’s signed and trusted), Unsigned, or “Not Verified” (if is not trusted).Ĭonfigure Symbols – Taken from the Help file: ” Verify Image Signatures – If enabled, Process Explorer will checks if a process’ image has been digitally signed by a certificate authority that is trusted by the computer. I/O History tray icon – same than the previous option, but the I/O output will be shown Hide when minimized – when flagged, only the icon in the traybar will be displayed and not the icon in the taskbar.Īllow only one instance – if enabled, it will prevent to open more than one Process Explorer at the same time.Ĭonfirm Kill – if checked, everytime you try to kill a process, you’ll be asked for confirmationĬPU History in tray icon – when enabled you’ll see an icon in the traybar next to the clock with the CPU usage history If you want to put the task manager back, just click again on the same option and it will be restored. When selected, the Process Explorer will replace the original Task Manager. Replace Task Manager – Really interesting function. I’ve been really busy in the last two months, but now I’m back and I’ll go ahead with the analysis of Process Explorer.Īlways on top – used to put the main Process Explorer’s windows on top of all the others
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