Application Performance Counter Causes Exception - windows-10

We are having a weird problem with custom performance counters. On a colleagues machine I am getting an exception that a performance counter doesn't exist. Yet on other machines I do not have that problem. These are custom performance counters for our application.
In a .NET 4.7.2 application, does writing performance counters or even creating them require elevated privileges? Is there a work around for application that is in the field?
TIA,
Doug

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Understanding DebugDiag Tool

I have been trying to understand what is the cause of high memory usage from processes in the windows server I have. I installed that tool DebugDiag 1.2 to try to find the problem.
Here is what runs in my server:
I have the IIS server which has a decent number of pool applications (68 pool applications). For each pool application there are at least 4 applications.
Recently, I have faced problems related to high memory usage, causing the server to work at 97% of memory usage or higher.
It was working fine when I took this printscreen below. However, the memory usage will easily get higher.
Task Manager:
With that being said, I have been trying to understand how to use the tool "DebugDiag1.2" from microsoft to find something (part of the source code, an sql procedure) that might help me locate what is causing the problem.
I read that we can't limit the memory for each IIS pool application, so I guess the solution would be trying to optmize the application. But first I need to know where to start.
I hope someone can help me out.

iis Cpu is on 95% usage with very little users - on production

I have a web site and I am using iis as my web server. I noticed that on production server, the cpu reaches 95% usage pretty fast with very little users. this behaviour I don't see on my developement server. I am using visual studio to develop and iis as my local web server as well.
How much big traffic you have on production comparing to development server? How their parameters compare? Before starting a deep analysis of the application itself, I would identify all the infrastructure and environmental differences. Sometime such problems happens because of some other software, like antivirus software running in the background...
Nevertheless, because it sounds rather as a application problem, I would first check Event Viewer for errors. Then I would start from monitoring a few Performance Counters to correlate % Processor Time counter with Current Connections, Available Memory, # of Exceps Thrown / sec, % Time in GC and so on. This kind of behavior usually has a reason from the list:
excessive loops usage due to some logic error, like calling the same service again and again, trying to load or parse malfunctioned file etc. This can be analyzed with dump analysis (look below).
high CPU usage due to Garbage Collector - when memory usage is extensive (or there is a memory leak even) GC may start to consume more and more CPU fighting with the memory shortage. You will see this with memory-related performance counters.
a considerable amount of exceptions thrown (for example due to some environmental problems like network unavailability, production data difference) can also consume a lot of CPU. Event Viewer and exception-related performance counters (as they can be handled silently by your application) should be a indicator here.
To further analyze your application, I suggest to make a full memory dump during high CPU usage. You can do that with Debug Diag tool. Please refer this IIS troubleshooting guide for details.

How to simulate a Windows Azure VM crash in my DevAppFabric

We need to think big and our applications need to scale in order to work on the Windows Azure Platform. But how do I simulate a crash of one of the VMs running my application?
I want to see (debug) how my application behaves in such environment.
Simulating faults is simple (just call Thread.Abord()); but it won't tell you much about your design.
In particular, debugging is a bit irrelevant, because whenever VM stop working there is nothing more to observe (nothing more to debug too). You should just assume that your app is likely to be abruptly stopped at any point of its execution.
Since, you cannot realistically observe all the subtle data corruptions that could be caused by interrupted executions, you should think to your persistence design to be resilient to such problem from the start (idempotent processes help a lot when possible).

Sharepoint W3WP.EXE Process Consuming 100% CPU - Corrective Action?

We have a Windows Server 2003 web server, and on that server runs about 5-6 top level Sharepoint sites, with a different application pool for each one.
There is one W3WP process that keeps pegging 100% for most of the day (happened yesterday and today) and it's connected (found by doing "Cscript iisapp.vbs" at the command line and matching ProcessID) to a particular Sharepoint site...which is nearly unusable.
What kind of corrective action can I take? These are the following ideas I had
1) Stopping and restarting the Web Site in IIS - For some reason this didn't stop the offending W3WP process??? Any ideas why not?
2) Stopping and restarting the associated Application Pool.
3) Recycling the associated Application Pool.
Any of those sound like the right idea? If not what are some good things to try? I can't do an iisreset since I don't want to alter service to the other, much more heavily used, Sharepoint sites.
If I truly NEED to do some diagnostic work please point me in the right direction. I'm not the Sharepoint admin guy (he's out of town so I'm filling in even though I'm just a developer) but I'll do my best.
If you need any information just let me know and I'll look it up (slowly though, as that one process is pegging the entire machine).
It's not an IISReset that you need. You have a piece of code that is running amok with your memory. Most likely it's not actually a CPU problem but a paging problem. I've encountered this a few times with data structures in memory that grow too large to page in/out effectively and eventually the attempt to page data just begins consuming everything. The steps I would recommend are:
1) Go get the IIS Debug Diagnostics tools. And learn how to use them.
2) If possible, remove the session state from InProc to a state server or a sql server (since this requires serialization of all classes that go into session this may not be possible). This will help alleviate some process related memory issues.
3) Go to your application pool and adjust the number of worker processes upward. Remove Rapid fail protection (this will allow the site to continue serving pages even if rapid catastrophic errors occur).
The IIS debug diagnostics will record a LOT of data, but you can specify specific "catch" alerts that will detect hangs, excessive cpu usage etc. It will capture gigs of data, so be ready for a long wait when attempting to view the logs.
Turns out someone tried to install some features that went haywire.
So he wrote a stsadm script to uninstall those features
Processor was still pegging.
I restarted the IIS Application Pool for that IIS process, didn't fix it.
So then I restarted IIS for that site and that resolved the processor issue.

Isolating a rampant process in IIS

I have a webserver that is pegged and I've been able to isolate it to a particular website instance. I'd like to dig deeper and isolate the particular page/process that is causing the issue.. Any tips?
You can take a memory dump of the process and poke around with windbg.
There are posts on this issue from Tess Ferrandez blog. Just do as she say.
Which version of IIS are you using? Some of the higher ones allow for a separation of which process gets used to handle requests such as a worker process that you could isolate a bit more that way. I'd also suggest reading through the IIS logs to see what requests were being handled, how long they took, etc.
There are many different quirks to each IIS version. The really low ones just had a start/stop functionality, but the newer ones have really given administrators much more control and power, IMO.
You should try using a profiler to identify what is using up the most resources. I've used dotTrace Profiler, although that can be expensive if you're on a tight budget.
It allows you to see exactly what processes and method calls use of the most processing time of a request really well so you can isolate the most resource intensive operations.
You should really be able to use any profiler to do this, not just dotTrace. I just happen to only have experience with this one in particular.
Change your web garden setting to 10 or greater. Then watch your CPU and memory utilization on the web server.
Continue to increase the web garden setting until either the app is completely responsive with less than 5% average utilization OR you have actually maxed your web server's memory.
UPDATE
It's not about diagnosing, it's about properly configuring the IIS server. Web Gardens are one of the top misunderstood features of IIS. By increasing the available threads to handle new requests you remove the appearance of contention at the web server level and place it squarely where it belongs. In this case at your database. Instead of masking a problem it actually highlights exactly where the problem is.
This turned out to be a SQL problem (sql 2005). The solution was found by using SQL activity monitor to identify a suspended process with a Async_network_io wait type. We then ran SQL profiler to narrow it down to two massive queries which were returning an over abundance of results.

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