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I have a basic question. If I run an executable file (Release, Visual Studio 2010) on two computers with the same CPU speed run two different Windows operating systems, eg. Windws7 vs XP, shall I expect to see different CPU usages when I measure it using the task manager? Is the CPU speed the only factor to measuring the CPU usage?

Thanks.

Sar

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  • To give you more info, I am trying to find out whether I will get a better usage if I switch to Windows 7 from XP. To measure the CPU usage for this particular executable, I make sure no user program is running. I get the same CPU usage everytime.
    – Sar
    Sep 27, 2010 at 3:42
  • Welcome to SO! The way it works here is different from a normal messageboard, please edit your question to include additional details or clarifications.
    – STW
    Sep 27, 2010 at 3:55
  • I just want to point out that CPU usage in some cases are not representative for the actual work being done. Kernel time is also important to keep track of. For example if a program uses a function in the operating system core that needs a lot of processor time the program might seem to not use much cpu time at all but in reality the program indirectly causes a lot of cpu time to be used.
    – Waxhead
    Dec 18, 2011 at 21:37

3 Answers 3

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Different OS's? Yes.

Operating Systems are the go-between between the programs you run and the bare-metal they run on. As OS'es change and evolve the naturally and and remove features that consume resources--these are things that run in the background; or they could be changes to the manner in which the OS speaks to the hardware.

Also, the measurement of CPU usage is done by the OS. There isn't a tachometer on chips saying "running at 87% of redline", but rather that "tach" is constructed largely by the OS.


After better understanding your situation: I would suggest taking a look at the Performance Monitor (perfmon.exe) which ships with both XP and Win7, and gets you much finer-grain detail about processor usage levels. Another (very good) option would be to consider running a profiler on your application on both OSes and compare the results. It would likely be the best option to specifically benchmark your application on both OSes.

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  • Great! I will do a better performane measurement as you recommended.
    – Sar
    Sep 27, 2010 at 6:06
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Even on the same OS you should expect to see different usages, because there are so many factors that determine CPU usage.

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  • Hi. Thanks Sam.To measure the CPU usage for this particular executable, I make sure no user program is running. I get the same CPU usage everytime. My PC is running XP OS. My assignment is to reasearch to find out whether we will get a better usage if we switch to Windows 7.
    – Sar
    Sep 27, 2010 at 3:37
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The percentage of CPU usage listed in the task manager is not a very good indication of much of anything, except to say that a program either is, or is not using CPU. That particular statistic is derived from task switching statistics, and task switching is very sensitive to basically every single thing that's going on in a computer, from network access to memory speed to CPU temperature.

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