DPC Latency

Hi,
My name is Mike. I have been having a problem for a few months and can't seem to fix it. In short, I'm a mobile DJ who uses a PC. I have 2 laptops. One is a Dell with Windows XP and the other is a Sony Vaio with Windows 7 (64 bit). The software program that I'm using works perfectly with my Dell but freezes when I use the Sony. Mike

Mike,

Thinking about this, I have some questions, will post tomorrow, it's way late here.

Ap
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Assembled in my workshop
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo @ 3.00gHz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P35-S3G
Memory
4 GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
Sound Card
RME 24/96 Card, Realtek Internal Audio PreSonus FireStudio
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer 1917 (x2)
Screen Resolution
1280 x 1024 on both monitors
Hard Drives
Three 250GB Seagate SATA Barracuda 7200rpm
PSU
Rosewill 500-watt
Case
Rosewill mid-tower
Cooling
Noctua NH-U9B (CPU), PwrSupply fan + single large case Fan
Keyboard
Macally w/2/USB ports.
Mouse
Trackman Wheel
Other Info
Event 20/20 bas studio monitors, Yamaha sub.
Rackmount Korg/Roland/Yamaha synthesizers,
Cubase MIDI/audio recording. Sony Soundforge audio/mastering software. CD Architect Mastering. RME & Presonus audio interfaces.
Mike,

I would think the freezing problem is separate from the yellow spikes you're seeing with the DPC latency checker. If the DPC latency is a little high, the most you will see/hear are occasional audio dropouts.

Besides, a few yellow spikes shouldn't cause a program to freeze in the manner you describe.

Possible problems:

-A background process is interferring with the program.
Reboot the computer, wait 5 minutes then open Task Manager (right click on task bar) enable "Show processes from all users". Select the Processes tab, resize the window to show all processes. Make a screen grab of the process window and post it here.


-Serato Itch is not fully Win-7/64-bit compatible, possibly having a problem related to accessing the full 4GB of RAM. (Although the tech says it is)

Does the Freezing occur if you select the Laptops built-in audio as the main output for Itch.

You're powering the VCI-300 with external power, correct?
I'm assuming you've tried all USB ports. Does the VCI-300 use it's own driver? Have you down loaded and installed the latest version?

Ap
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Assembled in my workshop
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium
CPU
Intel Core 2 Duo @ 3.00gHz
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P35-S3G
Memory
4 GB
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 2600 XT
Sound Card
RME 24/96 Card, Realtek Internal Audio PreSonus FireStudio
Monitor(s) Displays
Acer 1917 (x2)
Screen Resolution
1280 x 1024 on both monitors
Hard Drives
Three 250GB Seagate SATA Barracuda 7200rpm
PSU
Rosewill 500-watt
Case
Rosewill mid-tower
Cooling
Noctua NH-U9B (CPU), PwrSupply fan + single large case Fan
Keyboard
Macally w/2/USB ports.
Mouse
Trackman Wheel
Other Info
Event 20/20 bas studio monitors, Yamaha sub.
Rackmount Korg/Roland/Yamaha synthesizers,
Cubase MIDI/audio recording. Sony Soundforge audio/mastering software. CD Architect Mastering. RME & Presonus audio interfaces.
Serato iTch Freeze with Windows 7 64 bit

Thanks so much for getting back to me. I'm sorry that it took me awhile to get back to you, things have been extremely busy on my end.

I haven't done what you recomended yet as far as grabbing a screen shot, but I will. If you don't mind, can you tell me how to grab a screen shot?

I AGREE WITH YOU 100% regarding your statement -
"-Serato Itch is not fully Win-7/64-bit compatible, possibly having a problem related to accessing the full 4GB of RAM. (Although the tech says it is)"

They will NOT admit to that. The constantly blame the freezing issue on the laptop, not the software. I've been reading & writing numerous threads on Serato's web site and noticed that there are ALOT of people are experiencing the SAME EXACT PROBLEM as me. Here is one response from the guys at Serato -

Sorry you are still experiencing issues. We'll continnue to keep helping you in your help thread, so keep an eye on that for the issue.


We have tested the operating system Windows 7 by Microsoft. The OS is compatible with ITCH.

However your laptop may be needing tweaks - laptop manufacturers can (and do) often ship computers loaded up with a lot of extras. Extras that can conflict with audio streaming. Some of your machine's drivers or hardware components may be setup by the manufacturer in a strange way - and sometimes this can result in audio issues. There can be many causes, but it's almost always the laptop setup.

We do love to find out any problems with ITCH however, so any bugs we can uncover we are certainly wanting to find as that will lead to better software :D

Like I said, I'm convinced that Windows 7 64 bit is NOT compatible with the Serato software. I just DJ'd a wedding this past Saturday and used my Dell laptop with XP and had no problems at all.



Thanks again for your assistance,

Mike
 

My Computer

OS
windows 7 64 bit
CPU
son vaio pc
Memory
4.00 gb
For screenshots. Type "Snipping Tool" into Windows search and hit enter.

A small window will open. Where the tab says New click the arrow and a list of options will appear. You can take window snips, or drag and highlight what you want to capture using rectangular snip. Have a bit of a play with it. You'll have it figured out in a few minutes.

Thanks for keeping us updated on the situation.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Toshiba P300
OS
Windows 8 Pro
CPU
Intel Centrino Dual Core P7450 2.13GHz
Memory
4gb
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Mobility Raedon HD3650
Hard Drives
Toshiba MK3252GSX ATA
Internet Speed
Wish it were faster
Hi Everybody. I had this issue and ran across a workaround (for me at least) on this website: MSE gradually increases DPC latency when there are high network activity My DPC latency has gone down from 117000 u-secs to an average of 170-250 u-secs. As it turned out Microsoft Security Essentials was unable to keep up with the task of real time monitoring of my uTorrent activity after about a day of being on. I hope this helps somebody. Good luck!
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self
OS
Windows 7 Professional 64 Bit
CPU
Intel Q9550
Motherboard
Asus P5b Deluxe WiFi
Memory
4.00 GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 7600 GT (don't laugh!)
Sound Card
onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung
I've been suffering of DPC latency for a few months, after more than 1 year of using my machine with no problem at all.

I learn about DPC Latency, and figured out that my NIC was causing the the latency.

I upgraded my BIOS and the NIC driver, but nothing solved it.

Reading this forum, I read that the Microsoft Security Essentials might be causing the problems.

After just started the uninstall process, the latency droped from 11379 to a average of 130us.

Now I'm using AVG 2011 Free, and sometimes I get a pick of 4000us.

Gonna be monitoring this and get back to you guys in a few days.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Self Build
OS
windows 7 ultimate 64bit
CPU
Intel Core 2 Quad 8200
Motherboard
ECS P45T-A
Memory
8 GB DDR 2 800MHZ
Graphics Card(s)
ATI Radeon HD 4870 512MB
Sound Card
Sound Blaster Audigy SE
Monitor(s) Displays
SAMSUNG XL2370
Hard Drives
SEAGATE 1.5TB 7.200 RPM
PSU
SEVENTEAM 520W
Case
Thermaltake Soprano RS
I know this is a bit of a bump, but I thought I'd share my experience to help the ppl with latency spikes.
I was having these as well and was getting a bit annoyed by the skipping music (Foobar2K) even with a high buffer settings.
Turns out the CPU's power saving features that windows 7 applies (more advanced than XP does) adds latency. This happens especially in times the system's relatively idle/ under low load. As listening to music isn't a heavy task at all (3% CPU usage max in my case), Windows will let the CPU switch to a lower performance state. Switching back and forth from this state is what induces the spikes. The problem can be even worse when you're heavily overclocking and your system's stability depends on finely tuned settings (dynamically changing these doesn't bode well).

Short solution: Click Start --> Search for "Power Options" and open this control panel --> (on default "Balanced (recommended)" is selected) Choose "change plan settings" --> "Change advanced power settings" --> "Processor power management" --> "Minimum processor state" --> change setting to "100%"

No more DPC latency spikes! (at least in my case)

Don't worry, functions like EIST, Enhanced halt and throttling (by means of lowering the multiplier) still work. These mechanisms are integrated in most modern CPU's and these options can be turned on/off in the BIOS.

Hopefully some of you will find this solution works. I can imagine this issue is a big PITA for people working with music and audio equipment that require low latency, stutterfree and gapless playback...
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Myself
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Core2Quad Q6600 (OC@3GHz)
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P35C-DS3R
Memory
OCZ Platinum XTC 4GB kit (1000MHz @5-5-5-18 CR:2T tRD:5)
Graphics Card(s)
XFX HD 5770 XT 1GB (OC: Core:875MHz Mem:1300MHz @1.2v)
Sound Card
Onboard 5.1 Realtek HD Audio ALC889A
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 2032BW 20" (2ms response)
Screen Resolution
1680x1050
Hard Drives
Samsung HD200HJ 200GB SATA2
PSU
Corsair VX450W
Case
Recom RC-8 Black
Cooling
CPU: Cooler Master Hyper XT Case: 2x 80mm & 1x 120mm low rpm
Keyboard
Logitech UltraX Media Keyboard
Mouse
Sharkoon FireGlider 3600DPI
Internet Speed
Tele2 ADSL (up to 20Mbit) 16Mbit down/ 1Mbit up
I know this is a bit of a bump, but I thought I'd share my experience to help the ppl with latency spikes.
I was having these as well and was getting a bit annoyed by the skipping music (Foobar2K) even with a high buffer settings.
Turns out the CPU's power saving features that windows 7 applies (more advanced than XP does) adds latency. This happens especially in times the system's relatively idle/ under low load. As listening to music isn't a heavy task at all (3% CPU usage max in my case), Windows will let the CPU switch to a lower performance state. Switching back and forth from this state is what induces the spikes. The problem can be even worse when you're heavily overclocking and your system's stability depends on finely tuned settings (dynamically changing these doesn't bode well).

Short solution: Click Start --> Search for "Power Options" and open this control panel --> (on default "Balanced (recommended)" is selected) Choose "change plan settings" --> "Change advanced power settings" --> "Processor power management" --> "Minimum processor state" --> change setting to "100%"

No more DPC latency spikes! (at least in my case)

Don't worry, functions like EIST, Enhanced halt and throttling (by means of lowering the multiplier) still work. These mechanisms are integrated in most modern CPU's and these options can be turned on/off in the BIOS.

Hopefully some of you will find this solution works. I can imagine this issue is a big PITA for people working with music and audio equipment that require low latency, stutterfree and gapless playback...


Doesn't seem to help me at all. Only if I disable all P2P apps and services. Which sucks.

Thanks for suggestion though.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Acer Aspire 6930///Compaq Presario SR5152NX
OS
Windows 7 Professional 32-bit///Vista Home Premium 32-bit
Memory
3GB RAM///2GB RAM
Graphics Card(s)
Built-in, crap///NVIDIA GeForce 6150SE nForce 430
Sound Card
Built-in, alright///Realtek HD audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Built in and 26" LCD/40" LCD (VGA splitter)
Screen Resolution
Laptop: 1366X768 26"Mon: 1366X768 40"Mon:1920X1080
Hard Drives
Internal 350GB///250GB
2 Seagate 1TB HDD Ext.
1 Verbatim 500GB HDD Ext.
Cooling
Stock fans
Keyboard
Intelli-Type Wireless multimedia keyboard
Mouse
MS Wireless Notebook Optical Mouse 3000
Internet Speed
15Mbps Telus DSL
Other Info
2 PS3's, 1 XBOX360, and a Panasonic Blu-Ray player rendering media to various locations in house via PS3 Media Server*****
DIR-655 Xtreme N Gb router w/DAP-1522 bridge/access point******Using Input Director to share keyboard and mouse across all screens and PC's in my room.
in your bios there may be an option called EIST... disabling it should lower your DPC latency a tad.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Home Built
OS
Windows 7; Server 08; Window Home Server; Vista; XP
CPU
Intel E8400 @ 3.4Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte P35 DS3L
Memory
8 Gb Patriot DDr2 800
Graphics Card(s)
NVidia GTX460 OC
Sound Card
Onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 21"
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
Seagate 160Gb x2
Samsung 250Gb
PSU
Cooler Master 650w 52a on 12v
Case
Antec 300
Cooling
Stock
Keyboard
HP Standard USB
Mouse
Logitech 518
Internet Speed
25Mbit Down 1.5Mbit up
Other Info
http://www.speedtest.net/result/723924362.png
I was getting DCP spikes over 16K which caused my audio playback to drop or create a buzzing sound.
I tried the suggestion by Propheticus and set the minimum processor state to 100% in power options. Now I don't get spikes that high but I still got one over 13K. Still, a vast improvement.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Studio XPS 435T
OS
Windows 7 Prfessonal x64
CPU
Intel i7 2.67GHz
Memory
8GB
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell (2) DVI & HDMI
Hard Drives
1 TB HDD (2)
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