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audiodg.exe

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  #1  
Old 13-06-2006
ThrmanMunson15
 
Posts: n/a
audiodg.exe

tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
computing power?

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  #2  
Old 13-06-2006
rahi
 
Posts: n/a
RE: audiodg.exe

At the moment, there doesnt seem to be any references to that program you are
having problems. To narrow down the options, try following. A) check updated
audio drivers B) disable soundcard C) check dx diagnostics if that gives any
hints. If you find the cause send bug report about it. Thumbs up.
--
Try, learn, experience.


"ThrmanMunson15" wrote:

> tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
> they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
> fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
> program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
> point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
> what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
> computing power?


Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old 26-06-2006
Alex Mortlock
 
Posts: n/a
RE: audiodg.exe

Actually this is a windows component. it is in the windows folder System32.
it is the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation. from what i have noticed
atleast
with my systems is that any sound includeing the the interfacre sounds,
games,
and such some how cause this aplication to absorbe system resources. however
i cannot be sure as to the complications of audio drivers attributeing to
this program
from no clearing the resources used once they are no longer needed. On my
system
that has seemed to eat over 1.5 GB of ram it runs on a Creative Sound Blaster
Audigy 2 ZX Platinum. Now my second and third systems run off of the onboard
nforce 530 chipset and they do not exhibit this annomily.

Also it must be stated that all of the drivers are beta as well as the OS.
there
could be an unknow conflict between the said application and the drivers used.
tho i do not yet know the function of this program i can tell you that it
for lack of
a better was to describe it neither harmless nor harmfull it just seems to
eat
tons of resources some time and yet other times it just runs perfect i do feel
that it is on a system to system basis.

"rahi" wrote:

> At the moment, there doesnt seem to be any references to that program you are
> having problems. To narrow down the options, try following. A) check updated
> audio drivers B) disable soundcard C) check dx diagnostics if that gives any
> hints. If you find the cause send bug report about it. Thumbs up.
> --
> Try, learn, experience.
>
>
> "ThrmanMunson15" wrote:
>
> > tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
> > they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
> > fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
> > program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
> > point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
> > what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
> > computing power?


Reply With Quote
  #4  
Old 26-06-2006
Alex Mortlock
 
Posts: n/a
RE: audiodg.exe

Actually this is a windows component. it is in the windows folder System32.
it is the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation. from what i have noticed
atleast
with my systems is that any sound includeing the the interfacre sounds,
games,
and such some how cause this aplication to absorbe system resources. however
i cannot be sure as to the complications of audio drivers attributeing to
this program
from no clearing the resources used once they are no longer needed. On my
system
that has seemed to eat over 1.5 GB of ram it runs on a Creative Sound Blaster
Audigy 2 ZX Platinum. Now my second and third systems run off of the onboard
nforce 530 chipset and they do not exhibit this annomily.

Also it must be stated that all of the drivers are beta as well as the OS.
there
could be an unknow conflict between the said application and the drivers used.
tho i do not yet know the function of this program i can tell you that it
for lack of
a better was to describe it neither harmless nor harmfull it just seems to
eat
tons of resources some time and yet other times it just runs perfect i do feel
that it is on a system to system basis.

"rahi" wrote:

> At the moment, there doesnt seem to be any references to that program you are
> having problems. To narrow down the options, try following. A) check updated
> audio drivers B) disable soundcard C) check dx diagnostics if that gives any
> hints. If you find the cause send bug report about it. Thumbs up.
> --
> Try, learn, experience.
>
>
> "ThrmanMunson15" wrote:
>
> > tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
> > they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
> > fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
> > program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
> > point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
> > what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
> > computing power?


Reply With Quote
  #5  
Old 02-07-2006
Jason Birch
 
Posts: n/a
RE: audiodg.exe

Yes, I have also encountered this issue before. Considering I am also running
a Creative card (Soundblaster Live! 5.1) it may be an issue simply with these
cards. Unfortunately for myself, I am running the x64 version, and Creative
are, to say the least, sloppy and negligent with their drivers. It took a
while, but I had to use the 64-bit XP drivers, and so far I've only moderate
success... I achieve only stereo sound, not 5.1, and I dont achieve 24-bit
quality either (both the sound card and speakers are 24-bit capable). In
fact, unless I am planning to watch a movie, I usually make a habit of ending
this task immediately, before it begins to eat in excess of 1.5 GB of RAM...
It is also interesting to note that, at least for me, audiodg.exe is NOT a
32-bit process, so I know not why it would be stored in System32, and not
SysWOW64. Oh never mind, it is contained within both, the x64 version a
noticiable 38 KB smaller. It is quite the feat of this 78 KB application to
create a proverbial sink of RAM.

It is interesting to note though I have seen this process at roughly 1 GB of
RAM, and upon checking later found it at an acceptable (yet perhaps
unreasonable) 200 MB. In general though, it is more of a steady climb than
decline.

Unfortunately for you, ThrmanMunson15, I've not had issues with CPU usage
with this process. I am also able to end it, and with extreme prejudice. I
am, however, unable to create a dump of the process, and not for lack of
space.

Again, I know not if this is a problem with the 64-bit compatibility, the
sloppy driver support of creative, or a uncommon Vista flaw, but it wasn't
covered in the latest 5 updates I need to restart to install now :(

Believe me, I looked.

"Alex Mortlock" wrote:

> Actually this is a windows component. it is in the windows folder System32.
> it is the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation. from what i have noticed
> atleast
> with my systems is that any sound includeing the the interfacre sounds,
> games,
> and such some how cause this aplication to absorbe system resources. however
> i cannot be sure as to the complications of audio drivers attributeing to
> this program
> from no clearing the resources used once they are no longer needed. On my
> system
> that has seemed to eat over 1.5 GB of ram it runs on a Creative Sound Blaster
> Audigy 2 ZX Platinum. Now my second and third systems run off of the onboard
> nforce 530 chipset and they do not exhibit this annomily.
>
> Also it must be stated that all of the drivers are beta as well as the OS.
> there
> could be an unknow conflict between the said application and the drivers used.
> tho i do not yet know the function of this program i can tell you that it
> for lack of
> a better was to describe it neither harmless nor harmfull it just seems to
> eat
> tons of resources some time and yet other times it just runs perfect i do feel
> that it is on a system to system basis.
>
> "rahi" wrote:
>
> > At the moment, there doesnt seem to be any references to that program you are
> > having problems. To narrow down the options, try following. A) check updated
> > audio drivers B) disable soundcard C) check dx diagnostics if that gives any
> > hints. If you find the cause send bug report about it. Thumbs up.
> > --
> > Try, learn, experience.
> >
> >
> > "ThrmanMunson15" wrote:
> >
> > > tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
> > > they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
> > > fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
> > > program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
> > > point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
> > > what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
> > > computing power?


Reply With Quote
  #6  
Old 02-07-2006
Jason Birch
 
Posts: n/a
RE: audiodg.exe

Yes, I have also encountered this issue before. Considering I am also running
a Creative card (Soundblaster Live! 5.1) it may be an issue simply with these
cards. Unfortunately for myself, I am running the x64 version, and Creative
are, to say the least, sloppy and negligent with their drivers. It took a
while, but I had to use the 64-bit XP drivers, and so far I've only moderate
success... I achieve only stereo sound, not 5.1, and I dont achieve 24-bit
quality either (both the sound card and speakers are 24-bit capable). In
fact, unless I am planning to watch a movie, I usually make a habit of ending
this task immediately, before it begins to eat in excess of 1.5 GB of RAM...
It is also interesting to note that, at least for me, audiodg.exe is NOT a
32-bit process, so I know not why it would be stored in System32, and not
SysWOW64. Oh never mind, it is contained within both, the x64 version a
noticiable 38 KB smaller. It is quite the feat of this 78 KB application to
create a proverbial sink of RAM.

It is interesting to note though I have seen this process at roughly 1 GB of
RAM, and upon checking later found it at an acceptable (yet perhaps
unreasonable) 200 MB. In general though, it is more of a steady climb than
decline.

Unfortunately for you, ThrmanMunson15, I've not had issues with CPU usage
with this process. I am also able to end it, and with extreme prejudice. I
am, however, unable to create a dump of the process, and not for lack of
space.

Again, I know not if this is a problem with the 64-bit compatibility, the
sloppy driver support of creative, or a uncommon Vista flaw, but it wasn't
covered in the latest 5 updates I need to restart to install now :(

Believe me, I looked.

"Alex Mortlock" wrote:

> Actually this is a windows component. it is in the windows folder System32.
> it is the Windows Audio Device Graph Isolation. from what i have noticed
> atleast
> with my systems is that any sound includeing the the interfacre sounds,
> games,
> and such some how cause this aplication to absorbe system resources. however
> i cannot be sure as to the complications of audio drivers attributeing to
> this program
> from no clearing the resources used once they are no longer needed. On my
> system
> that has seemed to eat over 1.5 GB of ram it runs on a Creative Sound Blaster
> Audigy 2 ZX Platinum. Now my second and third systems run off of the onboard
> nforce 530 chipset and they do not exhibit this annomily.
>
> Also it must be stated that all of the drivers are beta as well as the OS.
> there
> could be an unknow conflict between the said application and the drivers used.
> tho i do not yet know the function of this program i can tell you that it
> for lack of
> a better was to describe it neither harmless nor harmfull it just seems to
> eat
> tons of resources some time and yet other times it just runs perfect i do feel
> that it is on a system to system basis.
>
> "rahi" wrote:
>
> > At the moment, there doesnt seem to be any references to that program you are
> > having problems. To narrow down the options, try following. A) check updated
> > audio drivers B) disable soundcard C) check dx diagnostics if that gives any
> > hints. If you find the cause send bug report about it. Thumbs up.
> > --
> > Try, learn, experience.
> >
> >
> > "ThrmanMunson15" wrote:
> >
> > > tonight my computer keept on freezing on me. (nothing new with windows, i
> > > they might do alot to fix that) normaly i know what to do in task manager to
> > > fix it, however this time i came across audiodg.exe i have never seen this
> > > program and it was sucking up all my computer usage. it was at 99% at one
> > > point. i tired canceling it however it is a manditory program.
> > > what does this program control, how can i stop it from using all my
> > > computing power?


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  #7  
Old 06-07-2006
joakim_tosteberg
 
Posts: n/a
Re: audiodg.exe


I to have been having this problem the last day, but I'm not having any
Creative soundcard, rather intergrated sound using AC'97 drivers.


--
joakim_tosteberg
------------------------------------------------------------------------
joakim_tosteberg's Profile: http://vista64.net/forums/member.php?userid=132
View this thread: http://vista64.net/forums/showthread.php?t=4784


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  #8  
Old 07-05-2007
Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 2
Audiodg.exe - FIXED

right click on the speaker icon at the bottom right.
select Playback Devices
highlight the icon with the green check mark
click Properties
click the Advanced tap
uncheck Enable audio enhancements

Not sure if that will lower the sound quailty but at least my lowly P4 2.66Ghz doesn't skip anymore. Now audiodg.exe run less than 5% of the CPU time.

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  #9  
Old 14-01-2009
Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2009
Posts: 1
Re: audiodg.exe

The audiodg proces is indeed a system proces, which is used sound processing on your machine. More about the proces can be read in this blog post: http://blogs.msdn.com/larryosterman/...diodg-exe.aspx

The solution to the CPU problem has been to me to disable the service in computer management at reboot, so it wouldn't start at system bootup. Then, when I'm back in windows, I just re-enable it. At that point in time, it won't eat your CPU anymore.

I have no exact explanation to why it eats that much cpu, but I expect it to be a driver incompatibility. Porbably the Realtek AC97 (in my case) drivers aren't reacting the way audiodg expects them to do.

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  #10  
Old 22-05-2009
Member
 
Join Date: May 2009
Posts: 1
Re: Audiodg.exe - FIXED

Quote:
Originally Posted by HemanC View Post
right click on the speaker icon at the bottom right.
select Playback Devices
highlight the icon with the green check mark
click Properties
click the Advanced tap
uncheck Enable audio enhancements

Not sure if that will lower the sound quailty but at least my lowly P4 2.66Ghz doesn't skip anymore. Now audiodg.exe run less than 5% of the CPU time.
heyhey HemanC i did what you said and the audiodg.exe dosent eat up much of my CPU anymore
but now my vent and msn voicecalls dont get any sound from it is there anyway to fix it?

many thx

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