Tom Bednarz Posted Friday at 04:10 PM Share Posted Friday at 04:10 PM I'm having an issue with Sonar still displaying high memory usage after closing a project. I have to reboot to "reset" the System Memory Usage displayed in the Sonar System Performance Meter. Attached is a screen shot including the Performance Meter after closing a project still showing 38% or about 28 GB. However, the Memory Usage for Sonar displayed in the Task Manager/Performance tab displays 7 GB related to this screen shot. Thoughts? Thanks! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Wookiee Posted Friday at 08:12 PM Share Posted Friday at 08:12 PM @Tom Bednarz I suggest you report it to support@cakewalk.com, does it reset if you close and reopen Sonar? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tom Bednarz Posted Friday at 11:30 PM Author Share Posted Friday at 11:30 PM Thanks for the reply. No, it does NOT reset when closing/opening Sonar. Just rebooting. Thanks again Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sjoens Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM Share Posted yesterday at 01:00 AM Not sure if this is by design or has always been a bug but SONAR and CbB have always behaved similarly on my systems. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
OutrageProductions Posted yesterday at 01:28 AM Share Posted yesterday at 01:28 AM (edited) @Tom Bednarz I run sessions that will eat up to 80-90 Gb of my 128 available, but after flushing back to just the basic OS requirements leaves me with about 4.2Gb actually in use. I've found that NI Kontakt (et al), Spitfire, and UVI have a tendency to hang around in the Standby ram waiting for cocktails or the after party for some reason, so... {Some folks have an issue with, and will argue about my method, but I've been using it for 25+ years with zero issues:} DL "Rammap(dot)exe" and unzip it somewhere convenient. Create a batch file to open a CMD window and (with echo on, and a 2 second delay between each command) run the <Empty Standby List> & <Empty Working Sets> commands to flush the ram. Store the batch file somewhere convenient like the desktop and name it "Flush Ram(dot)bat" or something. I do this after and/or between each session. Works like a charm. It has never failed. Not even once. [Here's the batch file:] ::@echo off echo cd\{YOUR EXACT LOCATION OF RAMMAP} START rammap -Et timeout/t 2 /nobreak START rammap -Ew timeout/t 2 /nobreak Exit Edited yesterday at 01:45 AM by OutrageProductions 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Glenn Stanton Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago (edited) yeah, rammap is one of many great tools in sysinternals originally created by Mark Russinovich from MS (not just a genius but also a really nice person). using the autostart as admin to cleanup all kinds of misc things that run on your machine, as well as rammap, process explorer, and many more you can keep your machine running clean as well as troubleshoot it. https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/ Edited 15 hours ago by Glenn Stanton Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
IgoRr Posted 12 hours ago Share Posted 12 hours ago I have been using an excellent program for cleaning memory for many years - MZ Ram Booster. This is a free utility with very good settings for any actions to clean memory, including automatically, with settings for "minimum RAM", "Auto-cleaning when starting / shutting down Windows", "Cleaning every ...", etc. In the vast majority of cases, I use it to work with video editors that consume a lot of RAM, I have never needed to use this program to work with Cakewalk or Sonar, but if someone has such problems, then MZ Ram Booster can also be useful. https://mz-ram-booster.en.softonic.com/download 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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