Fast Startup makes my PC laggy

NoNameExe

Commendable
Feb 15, 2016
65
0
1,640
Hi. I want to enable Windows 10's fast startup. I can check and uncheck fast startup and hybernate options. I turn-off my PC and then turn-on it. It actually boot more faster than before but everything is laggy and not stable. I can see graphic stuttering everywhere. I have tried to reinstall lastest video card drivers without success.
In BIOS settings I have disabled Windows 8/8.1 and Fast Boot features. Do I need to enable them?
 
Solution
update the BIOS in BIOS itself using Mflash and a USB stick with the latest BIOS version extracted on it.
Don´t use windows for this!
You should try enable the fast boot features. You will probably only see it rectified after doing a full restart after that.

If that does not solve the problem, you probably have a device or a driver that does not fully support fast boot.
 
bios fast boot and win 10 fast boot not related. the bios version just skips a few things at start up and means it hands control to windows faster.

Win 10 fast boot shouldn't be causing any lag, all it does is saves 50% of opened files into ram, 50% into storage at shutdown so when you start it doesn't have to load as much from the hdd, its already got 50% loaded.

More likely you need to upgrade drivers for your hardware.
 


I did a clean install and I upgraded all my drivers. What sould I do? 🙁

 


Here is my PC :
I5 4460
Msi h97 pc mate
Kingston hyperx fury 2x4gb
Thermaltake berlin 630w
MSI Gtx 750 ti
Western Digital Caviar Blue 1TB

My power plan is set to balanced.
 


So... I am doing some tests.
My HDD is ok. I already tested it.
I noticed that I have a process called "System Interrupt" taking 20-30% of CPU when I boot my PC with fast startup enabled. And this process doesn't go away.
The problem is that sometimes I have laggy animations and a general performance loss when fast startup is enabled.
 
Interrupts are a form of communication between software and hardware with the CPU. For example, when you type on your keyboard, the respective hardware and software sends interrupts to the CPU to inform it about the task at hand and to trigger the necessary processing.

Try moving your mouse and watch what happens to the CPU usage of system interrupts to understand what that means.

some suggestions here: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/fix-high-cpu-usage-caused-system-interrupts/
 


Sorry but this doesn't help me. It's a problem strictly related with fast startup setting.
 


I updated the bios 4 months ago. I have the last version : v5.9
EDIT: I will try to see what is using the most