Hello, not sure how much of this info is relevant, but I'm including it just in case. System specs at the bottom.
On Sun 19th Nov, I started my PC up, and was greeted with a message saying there was a big update to Windows10, and did I want to restart my PC. I said no, and rescheduled it for later. During the day, I installed Hyper-V. At some point in the afternoon, I noticed that my PC was grinding along, and the CPU desktop widget I have showed all 8 cores at around 98% activity.
Any attempt to use File Explorer was very painful. I could double-click a folder, and it would take about 5 seconds to open it. Even when it opened it, I often got "Working on it" for a few seconds before the files showed. As often as not, when I double-clicked, nothing happened at all. Sometimes it opened the textbox to rename the folder (despite me double-clicking), sometimes it just didn't do anything.
This happened on both of my main disks (C: and D:, see specs below), one of which is an SSD, so it's not like the device itself is going slowly.
As Windows was driving me mad about updating (so much for scheduling it for later!), I eventually gave up and restarted. The problem persisted. After a few days of trying to sort it out, a friend mentioned that it might be Hyper-V that was the cause. I uninstalled it, restarted, and all seemed well for a day or so. Then it started again.
The same friend suggested I use the Windows Performance Recorder. He had a look at a recording, and said that it looked like the Volume Shadow Copy service was the problem. As an experiment, I disabled this service, and indeed, the machine was back to its normal speed.
For (hopefully) obvious reasons, disabling VSS isn't a viable option, so I enabled it again. Sure enough, the problem came back. However, I can't work like this, my machine is crippled.
Edit: I just tried stopping the VSS service, and File Explorer was still slow, so maybe that was a red herring. I have noticed that the CPU meter doesn't always show high CPU usage when I'm having the issue, but very often I see the "NT Kernel & System" entry in Task Manager at the top of the list when ordered by CPU usage. Don't know if that helps.
Anyone any idea what could have gone wrong, and what I can do about it? Don't know if I've given all the relevant info, please ask if there is anything more I can supply.
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
System specs
Dell Precision T5810 Interl Xeon E5-1630 v3 @ 3.70GHz
40Gb RAM - generally have about 20Gb free
C: drive 1Tb SSD - main system drive, 640Gb free
D: drive 1Tb HDD - pictures, downloads, etc, 220Gb free
F: drive 6Tb HDD - holds Macrium Reflect disk images, Windows File history, 3.1Tb free
Windows 10 64-bit Professional
P.S. After posting, I tried stopping the VSS service, and File Explorer was just as slow, so it might not be VSS after all.
On Sun 19th Nov, I started my PC up, and was greeted with a message saying there was a big update to Windows10, and did I want to restart my PC. I said no, and rescheduled it for later. During the day, I installed Hyper-V. At some point in the afternoon, I noticed that my PC was grinding along, and the CPU desktop widget I have showed all 8 cores at around 98% activity.
Any attempt to use File Explorer was very painful. I could double-click a folder, and it would take about 5 seconds to open it. Even when it opened it, I often got "Working on it" for a few seconds before the files showed. As often as not, when I double-clicked, nothing happened at all. Sometimes it opened the textbox to rename the folder (despite me double-clicking), sometimes it just didn't do anything.
This happened on both of my main disks (C: and D:, see specs below), one of which is an SSD, so it's not like the device itself is going slowly.
As Windows was driving me mad about updating (so much for scheduling it for later!), I eventually gave up and restarted. The problem persisted. After a few days of trying to sort it out, a friend mentioned that it might be Hyper-V that was the cause. I uninstalled it, restarted, and all seemed well for a day or so. Then it started again.
The same friend suggested I use the Windows Performance Recorder. He had a look at a recording, and said that it looked like the Volume Shadow Copy service was the problem. As an experiment, I disabled this service, and indeed, the machine was back to its normal speed.
For (hopefully) obvious reasons, disabling VSS isn't a viable option, so I enabled it again. Sure enough, the problem came back. However, I can't work like this, my machine is crippled.
Edit: I just tried stopping the VSS service, and File Explorer was still slow, so maybe that was a red herring. I have noticed that the CPU meter doesn't always show high CPU usage when I'm having the issue, but very often I see the "NT Kernel & System" entry in Task Manager at the top of the list when ordered by CPU usage. Don't know if that helps.
Anyone any idea what could have gone wrong, and what I can do about it? Don't know if I've given all the relevant info, please ask if there is anything more I can supply.
Thanks in advance for any help you can give.
System specs
Dell Precision T5810 Interl Xeon E5-1630 v3 @ 3.70GHz
40Gb RAM - generally have about 20Gb free
C: drive 1Tb SSD - main system drive, 640Gb free
D: drive 1Tb HDD - pictures, downloads, etc, 220Gb free
F: drive 6Tb HDD - holds Macrium Reflect disk images, Windows File history, 3.1Tb free
Windows 10 64-bit Professional
P.S. After posting, I tried stopping the VSS service, and File Explorer was just as slow, so it might not be VSS after all.