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Thread: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

  1. #1
    Tallone Guest

    WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    I have problems almost every time I shut down or restart Windows Vista with a
    very long delay period. The message "Windows is Shutting Down" stays on the
    screen many times over 30 minutes and I finally have to shut down all power
    to the computer. I don't think this is normal and I was wondering if there
    is some program I have installed that could be causing this delay.

  2. #2
    Mark L. Ferguson Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    There is a workaround, until you spot whatever is causing it. You create a
    shortcut to use for shutdown. It should have the command:
    shutdown /p

    This forces all apps to close. No wait.

    I think you should probably try device manager during a normal shutdown, to
    see if you can catch some app hanging.

    --
    Was this helpful? Then click the Ratings button. Voting helps the web
    interface.
    http://www.microsoft.com/wn3/locales....htm#RateAPost

    Mark L. Ferguson

    ..
    "Tallone" <Tallone@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
    news:C51B52A4-641F-45C4-A394-1F17ABE2E58A@microsoft.com...
    >I have problems almost every time I shut down or restart Windows Vista with
    >a
    > very long delay period. The message "Windows is Shutting Down" stays on
    > the
    > screen many times over 30 minutes and I finally have to shut down all
    > power
    > to the computer. I don't think this is normal and I was wondering if
    > there
    > is some program I have installed that could be causing this delay.



  3. #3
    Bill Anderson Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    Tallone wrote:
    > I have problems almost every time I shut down or restart Windows Vista with a
    > very long delay period. The message "Windows is Shutting Down" stays on the
    > screen many times over 30 minutes and I finally have to shut down all power
    > to the computer. I don't think this is normal and I was wondering if there
    > is some program I have installed that could be causing this delay.


    I had a similar problem, but in my situation I'd see a message saying
    Vista was installing 1 of 1 update along with a caution not to turn off
    the computer. After a few hours of waiting -- once overnight -- I
    concluded I should just turn off the power no matter what Vista was
    telling me. Rebooting was never a problem. And I could never find in
    my update history any evidence that some update had either failed to
    load or was in the queue to load.

    I have obtained a copy of the forthcoming SP1, and after I installed it
    the shutdown problem went away. That's not the sort of solution you're
    looking for I suppose, but it worked for me.

    --
    Bill Anderson

    I am the Mighty Favog

  4. #4
    Malke Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    Tallone wrote:

    > I have problems almost every time I shut down or restart Windows Vista
    > with a
    > very long delay period. The message "Windows is Shutting Down" stays on
    > the screen many times over 30 minutes and I finally have to shut down all
    > power
    > to the computer. I don't think this is normal and I was wondering if
    > there is some program I have installed that could be causing this delay.


    Shutdown issues are generally caused by a program and/or process that is
    refusing to exit gracefully. The program and/or process can be from malware
    or can be legitimate (such as an invasive antivirus like Norton or McAfee).
    If you are using a Norton or McAfee product, uninstall it and replace with
    a better program such as NOD32, Kasperksy, or Avast (free). The Windows
    Firewall is adequate for most people. With Vista, shutdown issues can also
    be caused by old/poorly written drivers so make sure all drivers are
    updated. See Step B. below for general driver directions.

    A.The first step is always to make sure your computer is virus/malware free.

    http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware

    B. Drivers - The First Law of Driver Updates is "if it ain't broke, don't
    fix it". Normally if everything is working you want to leave things as they
    are. The exception is that heavy-duty gamers will usually want to update
    their video and sound drivers to squeeze every last bit of performance out
    of the hardware to get the fastest frame rates. If you're not one of those
    people, you don't need to update your drivers if there are no problems you
    are trying to solve.

    Never get drivers from Windows Update. Get them from:

    1. The device mftr.'s website; OR
    2. The motherboard mftr.'s website if hardware is onboard; OR
    3. The OEM's website for your specific machine if you have an OEM computer
    (HP, Dell, Sony, etc.).

    Read the installation instructions on the website where you get the drivers.

    To find out what hardware is in your computer:

    1. Read any documentation you got when you bought the computer.
    2. If the computer is OEM, go to the OEM's website for your specific model
    machine and look at the specs (you'll be there to get the drivers anyway)
    3. Download, install and run a free system inventory program like Belarc
    Advisor or System Information for Windows.

    http://www.belarc.com/free_download.html - Belarc Advisor
    http://www.gtopala.com/ - System Information for Windows

    C. If the computer is virus/malware-free, drivers are current, and no Norton
    or McAfee programs are installed, then do clean-boot troubleshooting to see
    which program/process is the culprit:

    How to perform a clean boot in Vista and XP -
    http://support.microsoft.com/kb/331796

    D. If you need more information, here is an excellent shutdown
    troubleshooter:

    http://www.aumha.org/win5/a/shtdwnxp.htm

    Standard caveat: If troubleshooting the issue is too difficult - and there
    is absolutely no shame in admitting this isn't your cup of tea - take the
    machine to a computer repair shop. This will not be your local
    BigComputerStore/GeekSquad type of place. Get recommendations from family,
    friends, colleagues.


    Malke
    --
    MS-MVP
    Elephant Boy Computers
    www.elephantboycomputers.com
    Don't Panic!

  5. #5
    mikeyhsd Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    take a look in the EVENT logs specifically at the shut down section.
    it should have entries that tell you what program is causing problems.




    mikeyhsd@sprintpcs.com



    "Tallone" <Tallone@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:C51B52A4-641F-45C4-A394-1F17ABE2E58A@microsoft.com...
    I have problems almost every time I shut down or restart Windows Vista with a
    very long delay period. The message "Windows is Shutting Down" stays on the
    screen many times over 30 minutes and I finally have to shut down all power
    to the computer. I don't think this is normal and I was wondering if there
    is some program I have installed that could be causing this delay.

  6. #6
    weewillie@anon.com Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    On Sat, 9 Feb 2008 17:43:37 -0600, "mikeyhsd" <mikeyhsd@sprintpcs.com>
    wrote:

    >take a look in the EVENT logs specifically at the shut down section.
    >it should have entries that tell you what program is causing problems.
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >mikeyhsd@sprintpcs.com


    where is the shutdown section within event log, I haven't found it yet

  7. #7
    Cow_Man Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow


    Hi, I'm new here but I was experiencing the same problem. What your comp
    is doing is making a restore point, to disable this go right-click
    computer>Properties then click on System Protection on the left had
    colum. In there, make shure that the drive(s) are unchecked.

    System restore points are only created after certain events such as new
    drivers, software, etc. For more info, click start>Help and Support,
    search system restore then click on the forst result.

    EXTREME! :cool:


    --
    Cow_Man

  8. #8
    SG Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    "Cow_Man" <guest@unknown-email.com> wrote in message
    news:6a7ef329f92f354393cafd45e7bda88c@nntp-gateway.com...
    >
    > Hi, I'm new here but I was experiencing the same problem. What your comp
    > is doing is making a restore point, to disable this go right-click
    > computer>Properties then click on System Protection on the left had
    > colum. In there, make shure that the drive(s) are unchecked.
    >
    > System restore points are only created after certain events such as new
    > drivers, software, etc. For more info, click start>Help and Support,
    > search system restore then click on the forst result.
    >
    > EXTREME! :cool:
    >
    >
    > --
    > Cow_Man



    Cow_Man,

    Not sure where you are getting your info from, but it's only somewhat
    correct.
    Also, that's bad advise to suggest someone to disable System Restore.

    Restore points are created:
    When software is installed using the Windows Installer, Package Installer or
    other installers which are aware of System Restore.
    When Windows Update installs new updates to Windows.
    When the user installs a driver that is not digitally signed by Windows
    Hardware Quality Labs.
    Every 24 hours of computer use (10 hours in Windows Me), or every 24 hours
    of calendar time, whichever happens first. This setting is configurable
    through the registry or using the deployment tools. Such a restore point is
    known as a system checkpoint. System Restore requires Task Scheduler to
    create system checkpoints. Moreover, system checkpoints are only created if
    the system is idle for a certain amount of time.
    When the operating system starts after being off for more than 24 hours.
    When the user requests it. On Windows Vista, shadow copies created during
    File Backup and Complete PC Backup can also be used as restore points.
    Older restore points are deleted as per the configured space constraint on a
    First In, First Out basis also known as FIFO


    --
    All the best,
    SG

    Is your computer system ready for Vista?
    https://winqual.microsoft.com/hcl/
    Want to keep up with the latest news from MS?
    http://news.google.com/nwshp?tab=wn&ned=us&topic=t
    Just type in Microsoft


  9. #9
    PD43 Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 00:49:43 -0500, Cow_Man <guest@unknown-email.com>
    wrote:

    >
    >Hi, I'm new here but I was experiencing the same problem. What your comp
    >is doing is making a restore point, to disable this go right-click
    >computer>Properties then click on System Protection on the left had
    >colum. In there, make shure that the drive(s) are unchecked.
    >
    >System restore points are only created after certain events such as new
    >drivers, software, etc. For more info, click start>Help and Support,
    >search system restore then click on the forst result.
    >
    >EXTREME! :cool:


    Besides replying to a post that is three months old, your solution to
    the problem couldn't be more wrong. System restore is NOT a reason
    for slow shutdown.

    And your advice to disable system restore is bad advice anyway.

  10. #10
    Cow_Man Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow


    I found out that is was creating them during shutdown because at the
    same time I shut down, was the same time the last backup was created. I
    just left it over night (It took many hours to shut down :() then I
    botted up, then shut down and only took a few seconds. There was also
    alot of hard drive activity which also suggested this.


    --
    Cow_Man

  11. #11
    PD43 Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 02:31:42 -0500, Cow_Man <guest@unknown-email.com>
    wrote:

    >I found out that is was creating them during shutdown because at the
    >same time I shut down, was the same time the last backup was created. I
    >just left it over night (It took many hours to shut down :() then I
    >botted up, then shut down and only took a few seconds. There was also
    >alot of hard drive activity which also suggested this.


    Sure would be nice if you learned how to quote what you are replying
    to, Cow_Brain.

  12. #12
    Cow_Man Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow


    PD43;760332 Wrote:
    >
    > Sure would be nice if you learned how to quote what you are replying
    > to, Cow_Brain.

    lol? I think it's obvous I'm replying to the previous post if I didn't
    quote it.

    Anyways, I checked the Event Viewer and there's nothing there to say if
    there's any application causing the long shut down.


    --
    Cow_Man

  13. #13
    PD43 Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 05:22:12 -0500, Cow_Man <guest@unknown-email.com>
    wrote:

    >
    >PD43;760332 Wrote:
    >>
    >> Sure would be nice if you learned how to quote what you are replying
    >> to, Cow_Brain.

    >lol? I think it's obvous I'm replying to the previous post if I didn't
    >quote it.


    Obvious to you, but not to those of us using newsreaders.

    You're one of the few people using that web-interfaced vBulletin board
    site. It has all the posts for viewing - which is the ONLY good thing
    it has going for it.

    MOST of us use a newsreader and access the group in a different manner
    and don't have all the previous posts available.

    FYI... the majority of the posts you see there are NOT from users of
    that site. The software grabs all the posts made by folks all over
    the world and puts them there - making the site look a lot busier than
    it otherwise would be.


    >
    >Anyways, I checked the Event Viewer and there's nothing there to say if
    >there's any application causing the long shut down.



  14. #14
    Cow_Man Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow


    Sorry about that, didn't know there was such a thing, now that I do, I
    got myself one too.

    Also, when your system does a system restore, does it collect system
    settings for all user accounts? That might explain why it may take abit
    longer.
    PD43;760393 Wrote:
    > On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 05:22:12 -0500, Cow_Man <guest@xxxxxx-email.com>
    > wrote:
    > > > >
    > > >
    > > >PD43;760332 Wrote:> > > > >
    > > > >>
    > > > >> Sure would be nice if you learned how to quote what you are replying
    > > > >> to, Cow_Brain.> > > > >lol? I think it's obvous I'm replying to the previous post if I

    > > didn't
    > > >quote it. > > Obvious to you, but not to those of us using newsreaders.

    >
    > You're one of the few people using that web-interfaced vBulletin
    > board
    > site. It has all the posts for viewing - which is the ONLY good
    > thing
    > it has going for it.
    >
    > MOST of us use a newsreader and access the group in a different
    > manner
    > and don't have all the previous posts available.
    >
    > FYI... the majority of the posts you see there are NOT from users of
    > that site. The software grabs all the posts made by folks all over
    > the world and puts them there - making the site look a lot busier
    > than
    > it otherwise would be.
    >
    > > > >
    > > >
    > > >Anyways, I checked the Event Viewer and there's nothing there to say

    > > if
    > > >there's any application causing the long shut down. > >



    --
    Cow_Man

  15. #15
    Downsized Guest

    Re: WIndows Vista Shutdown Process is very slow

    "SG" I came across this discussion AND it might apply to my problem. I'd
    like to ask your opinion.

    I hate it when "patch Tuesday" comes around. The important updates are
    downloaded and waiting for me to either put the machine to sleep or shutdown.
    When I do, I get the "do not unplug or power down" message with the number of
    updates displayed. Some months, the message is displayed and the machine
    doesn't turn off for hours and hours!!!! One month, there were 13 updates
    and the process took 16 + hours!!!! The machine has Ultimate SP1, 3 gig of
    ram and a quad processor. Norton 360 is active. The hard drive light flashes
    infrequently. I'm thinking there is a file or files not sized properly.

    If I remember correctly, I don't think a swap file is established.
    Any ideas?
    Downsized

    "SG" wrote:

    > "Cow_Man" <guest@unknown-email.com> wrote in message
    > news:6a7ef329f92f354393cafd45e7bda88c@nntp-gateway.com...
    > >
    > > Hi, I'm new here but I was experiencing the same problem. What your comp
    > > is doing is making a restore point, to disable this go right-click
    > > computer>Properties then click on System Protection on the left had
    > > colum. In there, make shure that the drive(s) are unchecked.
    > >
    > > System restore points are only created after certain events such as new
    > > drivers, software, etc. For more info, click start>Help and Support,
    > > search system restore then click on the forst result.
    > >
    > > EXTREME! :cool:
    > >
    > >
    > > --
    > > Cow_Man

    >
    >
    > Cow_Man,
    >
    > Not sure where you are getting your info from, but it's only somewhat
    > correct.
    > Also, that's bad advise to suggest someone to disable System Restore.
    >
    > Restore points are created:
    > When software is installed using the Windows Installer, Package Installer or
    > other installers which are aware of System Restore.
    > When Windows Update installs new updates to Windows.
    > When the user installs a driver that is not digitally signed by Windows
    > Hardware Quality Labs.
    > Every 24 hours of computer use (10 hours in Windows Me), or every 24 hours
    > of calendar time, whichever happens first. This setting is configurable
    > through the registry or using the deployment tools. Such a restore point is
    > known as a system checkpoint. System Restore requires Task Scheduler to
    > create system checkpoints. Moreover, system checkpoints are only created if
    > the system is idle for a certain amount of time.
    > When the operating system starts after being off for more than 24 hours.
    > When the user requests it. On Windows Vista, shadow copies created during
    > File Backup and Complete PC Backup can also be used as restore points.
    > Older restore points are deleted as per the configured space constraint on a
    > First In, First Out basis also known as FIFO
    >
    >
    > --
    > All the best,
    > SG
    >
    > Is your computer system ready for Vista?
    > https://winqual.microsoft.com/hcl/
    > Want to keep up with the latest news from MS?
    > http://news.google.com/nwshp?tab=wn&ned=us&topic=t
    > Just type in Microsoft
    >
    >


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