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I have a program that works fine on VS2008 and Vista, but I'm trying it on Windows 7 and VS2010 / .NET Framework 4.0 and it's not working. Ultimately the problem is that System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounterCategory.GetCategories() (and other PerformanceCounterCategory methods) is not working. I'm getting following:

System.InvalidOperationException with the message "Cannot load Counter Name data because an invalid index '' was read from the registry."

I can reproduce this with the very simple program shown below:

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        foreach (var pc in System.Diagnostics.PerformanceCounterCategory.GetCategories())
        {
            Console.WriteLine(pc.CategoryName);
        }
    }
}

I did make sure I'm running the program as an admin. It doesn't matter if I run it with VS/Debugger attached or not. I don't have another machine with Windows 7 or VS2010 to test it on, so I'm not sure which is complicating things here (or both?). It is Windows 7 x64 and I've tried forcing the app to run in both x32 and x64 but get the same results.

1
  • 1
    If you're not sure about it Windows vs .net version, you could try changing the project properties in VS to target .net 3.5, rebuild, and try again. Or you could build the same code on a vista/xp machine with 2008, and copy the exe to the Win7 machine.
    – JMarsch
    Oct 8, 2009 at 22:54

1 Answer 1

87

It seems performance counters were corrupted on my system. Although I didn't follow this post exactly, it led me to the solution. Here is what I did:

In an command prompt with administrator/elevate privileges typed the following:

lodctr /?

Useful stuff in there...

Then typed:

lodctr /R

According to the docs from the prior step, this gets windows to rebuild the perf registry strings and info from scratch based on the current registry settings and backup INI files. I have a feeling this is what did the magic. However, next I noticed the .NET performance counters were not there anymore so based on this I typed the following to reload them:

lodctr "C:\Windows\Microsoft.NET\Framework64\v4.0.20506\corperfmonsymbols.ini"

Note that this path is for .NET Framework 4.0 on x64. You can imagine the path for other variations of the framework/platform. I'm guessing you should always load the counters from the highest version of the .NET framework that you have installed, but that is just a guess.

I hope this helps someone else someday!

12
  • 1
    Is there any idea as to what causes this to happen?
    – JeremyK
    Mar 5, 2012 at 14:17
  • 1
    Thanks for the answer, saved a lot of time for me.
    – JeremyK
    Mar 6, 2012 at 13:03
  • 1
    This was an annoying bug, thanks for the answer, fixed it for me too! Oct 8, 2012 at 16:01
  • 1
    This answer just saved me a bunch of time too. Thanks! Oct 18, 2012 at 20:27
  • 5
    I only had to run lodctr /R to resolve the same issue for me.
    – absynce
    Jun 3, 2013 at 20:41

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