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The Sysinternals web site was created in 1996 by Mark Russinovich and Bryce Cogswell to host their advanced system utilities and technical information. Microsoft acquired Sysinternals in July, 2006. Whether you’re an IT Pro or a developer, you’ll find Sysinternals utilities to help you manage, troubleshoot and diagnose your Windows systems and applications. If you have a question about a tool or how to use them, please visit the Sysinternals Forum for answers and help from other users and our moderators.
.gif) | File and Disk Utilities
Utilities for viewing and monitoring file and disk access and usage. | .gif) | Networking Utilities
Networking tools that range from connection monitors to resource security analyzers. | .gif) | Process Utilities
Utilities for looking under the hood to see what processes are doing and the resources they are consuming. |
| .gif) | Security Utilities
Security configuration and management utilities, including rootkit and spyware hunting programs. | .gif) | System Information
Utilities for looking at system resource usage and configuration. | .gif) | Miscellaneous Utilities
A collection of diverse utilities that includes a screen saver, presentation aid, and debugging tool. |
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Sysinternals LiveSysinternals Live is a service that enables you to execute Sysinternals tools directly from the Web without hunting for and manually downloading them. Simply enter a tool’s Sysinternals Live path into Windows Explorer or a command prompt as http://live.sysinternals.com/<toolname> or \\live.sysinternals.com\tools\<toolname>. You can view the entire Sysinternals Live tools directory in a browser at http://live.sysinternals.com.
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What's New
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What's New (November 12, 2008)- ZoomIt 2.2
This ZoomIt update makes it easier to see the drawing cursor when it’s small relative to the zoomed region by representing it as a cross hair, allows you to position the text cursor when you enter text mode, supports changing the text color for the break timer and while you’re placing the text cursor, and includes a number of other minor improvements.
What's New (October 28, 2008)- Channel9: Mark Russinovich goes Inside Windows 7
Mark talks about kernel changes in Windows 7 and Windows Server 2008 R2, including the removal of the scheduler’s dispatcher lock, support for up to 256 CPUs, boot from VHD, MinWin, core parking for power savings and more.
What's New (October 16, 2008)- Autoruns 9.35
This Autoruns update adds additional autostart locations, including lsastart, s0initialization, savedumpstart, and servicecontrollerstart, and fixes several bugs.
What's New (September 30, 2008)- Process Monitor 2.0
This major update to Process Monitor adds real-time TCP and UDP monitoring to its existing process, thread, DLL, file system and registry monitoring. You can now see the TCP and UDP activity processes performed, including the operation (e.g. connect, send, receive), local and remote IP addresses and DNS names, and operation transfer lengths. On Windows Vista, Process Monitor also collects thread stacks for network operations. - Mark’s Blog: The Case of the Sloooow System
Check out Mark’s latest blog post to see how he resolved a critical support incident on one of his home computers. - ZoomIt 2.11
ZoomIt now includes the ability to change the color of the break timer and modifies the way it captures the screen so that it includes tooltip windows. - Vista Springboard Virtual Roundtable on Performance
Watch Mark and a panel of MVPs and IT pros discuss Windows performance in this hour-long webcast where they cover topics from avoiding common pitfalls, defining performance baselines, performance monitoring tools, ways to improve overall system performance and common performance misconceptions.
What's New (September 11, 2008)- Coreinfo 1.0
Coreinfo is a new command-line utility that shows you the mapping between logical processors and the physical processor, NUMA node, and socket on which they reside, as well as the cache’s assigned to each logical processor. - Mark's Blog: Where in the World is Mark Russinovich?
Check out Mark's latest blog post to find out where he's going to be speaking this Fall and how Windows Internals 5th Edition is progressing.
What's New (September 2, 2008)What's New (August 21, 2008)- Desktops 1.0
This new utility enables you to create up to four virtual desktops and to use a tray interface or hotkeys to preview what’s on each desktop and easily switch between them. - Autoruns 9.33
This Autoruns update adds command-line options for automatically scanning and exporting scan results, as well as a number of bug fixes.
What's New (August 8, 2008)- Process Monitor 1.37
Process Monitor, a system monitoring utility, now prevents you from inadvertently closing the filter dialog without saving edits and fixes a subtle race condition bug in the driver. - Handle 3.41
Handle, a command-line tool for dumping information on open operating system handles, adds a new switch, -l, that dumps the sizes of pagefile-backed sections. - Mark to Keynote Virtualization Congress
Mark is going to deliver a keynote on Microsoft’s virtualization strategy at the independent Virtualization Congress in London in October.
What's New (August 1, 2008)- Mark’s Webcasts: Windows Security Boundaries
Mark’s session from TechEd US on what constitutes a security boundary is now available for on-demand viewing. Get the real story on Windows security-related features like Kernel Patch Protection (KPP), Kernel Mode Code Integrity, User sessions, UAC, Protected Mode IE, and more, to find out how they work, what they were designed for, and whether they are security boundaries.
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