Cisvc exe virus




















If it is a virus,you haven't mentioned if NIS is detecting but failing to remove or not detecting only. It is however, not an essential service, and is a known CPU hog. You can do the following to address it's CPU usage. Disable MS Indexing service Click Start Restart the computer and it will stay disabled. You can read more about cisvc. Back to top. Reg: Oct Just be aware of that, thats all.

At the same time I have to point out that cisvc. The legit program is called as part of Mcrosoft Indexing service. You may not be using this service or may have disabled it by virtue of the removal of all named exe files you did not name all the locations.

You're right I didn't get rid of it all This is not the real legit cisvc. I disabled the real cisvc. After disabling it the cisvc. I almost got rid of this annoying virus, just one more that keeps popping up and then hidding. Not sure how to catch it Any process has four stages of the lifecycle including start, ready, running, waiting, terminated or exit.

Should You Remove cisvc exe? Fix cisvc. There are many reasons why you are seeing cisvc. They slow down the whole system and also cause. This occurs because they modify the registry which is very important in the proper functioning of processes.

Incomplete installation Another common reason behind cisvc. Troy Hedges. In reply to Shawn Eary's post on May 26, Shawn, Good answer! In reply to Troy Hedges's post on May 28, The process that cisvc. Turning off the indexing is good for a lot of reasons for many, but it should have worked originally, and should not be a problem like this.

Killing it is a sad excuse, and next boot, it is back. In reply to DGPickett's post on June 7, DBPickett has valid points and I tend to agree with him that the indexing service should not take up so many reasources, but I didn't mean killing the indexing service in a one time Task Manager attempt.

I meant to permanently disable it. I "think" it is possible to permanently disable the Indexing Service. Just as a wild guess, I wonder if Sold State Hard Drives will make indexing less necessary in the future. While Solid State HDs aren't inherently good for streaming, they are inherently good for large numbers of random accesses reads, so a Solid State HD might perform better at finding files than a mechanical HD would.

I believe Solid State Hard Drives are now implemented in RAID like configurations of Flash Cells with some advanced caching mechanisms to overcome the problems with sequential access from Flash Cells and the wear out that occurs during writes, so a well designed Solid State Hard Drive might very well outperform and Mechanical HD even the areas that are traditionally weak for Flash Memory. In reply to Shawn Eary's post on June 8, Hi All, I've been using this disable work-around for over a year but had to re-enable the service.

Thanks in advance.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000