ACC: Microsoft Access Shows 100% CPU Utilization During Idle Time
This article was previously published under Q160819 Moderate: Requires basic macro, coding, and interoperability
skills. On This PageSYMPTOMS When you use System Monitor in Microsoft Windows 95,
Microsoft Windows 98, and Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me) or
Performance Monitor in Microsoft Windows NT and Microsoft Windows 2000 to track
CPU usage, Microsoft Access is reported to use 100 percent of CPU resources
even though it appears that Microsoft Access is idle.
CAUSE During idle time, Microsoft Access continuously polls its
message queue to check for keyboard and mouse activity. STATUS This behavior does not occur in Microsoft Access 2000.
MORE INFORMATION Microsoft Access was originally designed to operate in the
cooperative multitasking environment that Microsoft Windows 3.x provides. The
idle processing code built into Microsoft Access was designed to make sure that
Microsoft Access does not start processing background tasks during brief
periods of inactivity, such as when a user pauses between keystrokes. In the
preemptive multitasking environment of Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows Millennium Edition,
Windows NT, and Windows 2000, this idle processing code causes Microsoft Access
to use 100 percent of CPU resources briefly during idle time. Note Windows 95 uses preemptive multitasking for 32-bit Windows applications and, for backward compatibility, uses cooperative multitasking for 16-bit Windows applications (applications that are written for Windows 3.x). Microsoft Access polls its message queues for activity for about the first 30 seconds of idle time. During this time, Performance Monitor reports that Microsoft Access is using 100 percent of CPU resources. Note Microsoft Access only uses CPU resources that are idle. If your computer has other processes that are ready to run, it will run them. Microsoft Access does not decrease the performance of other applications as it polls its message queues. Steps to Reproduce the Behavior
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