Starting Applications with /REALTIME May Hang Windows NTLast reviewed: May 9, 1997Article ID: Q103475 |
The information in this article applies to:
SYMPTOMSFrom a Command Prompt (CMD.EXE), if you start an application with the /REALTIME switch, Windows NT may appear to hang.
CAUSEThe /REALTIME switch starts an application at a higher priority level than normal. This gives the application more processor time to use during its execution. If you use this switch on applications that are not designed for it, Windows NT will not respond to any other commands and will appear to hang, even though Windows NT is actually still running and executing as instructed by the command line switch.
RESOLUTIONTo prevent this situation from occurring, it is possible for the Administrator of the system to set a User's rights so they are unable to use this feature of setting thread priorities. Power Users are given the right to Increase Scheduling Priorities by default. To remove the right to Increase Scheduling Priorities, use the following procedure:
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Additional query words: prodnt hung lock freeze
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