Author Topic: Use new Powercfg Options to Find and Fix Energy-Related Problems  (Read 2679 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Nick

  • Administrator
  • Platinum Member
  • *
  • Posts: 46028
  • Karma: +1000/-0
  • Gender: Male
  • NickCS
    • http://www.facebook.com/nickcomputerservices
    • http://www.twitter.com/nickcomputer
    • Computer Chiangmai

Use new Powercfg Options to Find and Fix Energy-Related Problems

Discover how new options for the Powercfg utility can help you find and fix common energy-efficiency problems.


Powercfg is a command-line utility for configuring Windows 7 power management policy. Powercfg.exe exposes all power management settings, including those that are not available in the UI or from Group Policy.

Power management settings are represented by GUIDs, so using Powercfg.exe generally requires that you know the GUIDs for the settings you want to modify. However, Powercfg.exe also supports aliases for most common GUIDs. To display a list of supported aliases, type:
powercfg –aliases

In Windows 7, the Powercfg utility has been enhanced with a new command-line option: /energy. This can be used to detect common energy-efficiency problems, such as excessive processor utilization, increased timer resolution, inefficient power policy settings, ineffective use of suspend by USB devices, battery capacity degradation, and more. You can use this option to validate a system or configuration prior to deployment, provide support to users who encounter battery life or power consumption issues, or even diagnose energy-efficiency problems on your personal system.

In addition, a new /requests option for the Powercfg command lets you enumerate application and driver requests that prevent the computer from automatically turning off the display or entering Sleep mode. And a new /requestsoverride option for the Powercfg command lets you override either individual availability requests or all availability requests.

From the Microsoft Press book The Windows 7 Resource Kit by Mitch Tulloch, Tony Northrup, Jerry Honeycutt, Ed Wilson, and the Windows 7 Team at Microsoft.

credit: technet.microsoft.com


 
Share this topic...
In a forum
(BBCode)
In a site/blog
(HTML)


Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
0 Replies
3310 Views
Last post June 16, 2010, 06:25:48 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
2578 Views
Last post July 02, 2010, 05:45:43 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
1840 Views
Last post December 16, 2011, 04:05:15 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
2485 Views
Last post January 23, 2012, 02:08:28 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
3596 Views
Last post February 19, 2012, 02:40:38 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
2438 Views
Last post March 13, 2012, 05:07:46 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
1693 Views
Last post April 04, 2012, 06:32:24 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
3075 Views
Last post June 18, 2012, 08:37:35 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
1961 Views
Last post June 11, 2015, 01:01:41 PM
by Nick
0 Replies
108 Views
Last post October 27, 2024, 12:57:08 PM
by guupost