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What does the MSCONFIG utility do in Windows 10 and 11 on a Dell Computer?

Summary: The following article is a guide to the Microsoft Configuration (MSCONFIG) utility in Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems on Dell computers.

This article applies to This article does not apply to This article is not tied to any specific product. Not all product versions are identified in this article.

Instructions

Table of Contents:

  1. What is MSCONFIG?
  2. How to Open MSCONFIG
  3. How to use MSCONFIG to diagnose Boot Issues
  4. How to use MSCONFIG to troubleshoot a Configuration Issue
  5. How to use MSCONFIG to troubleshoot a Conflict Issue

What is MSCONFIG?

 

MSCONFIG is an operating system utility designed to troubleshoot the Microsoft Windows startup process. It can disable or re-enable software, device drivers, or Windows services that run at startup, and it can change boot parameters.

MSCONFIG is straightforward to use and helps you troubleshoot a lot of Windows 10 and 11 boot problems. You can modify how the computer boots (start-up file), the services, and the startup files on either a temporary or a permanent basis. This makes MSCONFIG a useful troubleshooting utility. It can be used to speed up your Boot times and to streamline what loads where and when as your computer starts up.

Note: There have been several changes made between the Windows 10 operating system and the Windows 11 operating system. MSCONFIG however is NOT one of them. Follow this guide for both operating systems.

How to Open MSCONFIG

 

  1. In Windows 10 and 11 you can press the Windows + R keys together and a run box appears.

    • Alternatively, pressing the windows key or clicking the start button opens the start menu and you can type MSCONFIG and the application is shown in a list.

       MSCONFIG search

      (Figure.1: MSCONFIG Search)

  2. Type MSCONFIG in the box and then press the ENTER key on your keyboard.

    MSCONFIG runbox

    (Figure.2: MSCONFIG Run Window)

  3. This launches the Microsoft System Configuration Utility.

  4. The MSCONFIG window contains five tabs:

    MSCONFIG Tabs

    (Figure.3: MSCONFIG Tabs)

    • General

      MCSONFIG General Tab

      (Figure.4: MSCONFIG General Tab)

    • Boot

    • Services

    • Startup

    • Tools


How to use MSCONFIG to diagnose Boot Issues

 

  • Boot Issues: These are issues where the computer is either having trouble loading correctly, is taking a long time to boot or is giving errors on-screen as it starts up. It can even be a combination of the three. First we identify the issue, narrow down the cause and then change it to resolve the problem.

The General tab

The General Tab

(Figure.5: MSCONFIG General Tab)

The MSCONFIG General tab gives you some basic options for starting your device. The default choice for the utility is Normal Startup. The other two options for starting the computer are Diagnostic Startup and Selective Startup.

Diagnostic Startup:

This starts Windows with basic services and drivers only. With this mode, you can determine if a basic Window file is the problem. This type of startup gives you a minimum environment for troubleshooting.

Selective Startup:

This allows you to choose which programs and services you want to open and which ones you want to keep from opening at startup.

If you detect that one of the launch programs is causing a problem at startup, then you can clear the Load Startup Items. It prevents any startup program from launching. This is too general to help you determine which program is causing the problem, but it helps you narrow down the issue to a certain area.


How to use MSCONFIG to troubleshoot a Configuration Issue

 

  • Configuration Issues: These are issues where new commands have been set or old ones modified and it had an adverse affect on the computer. This can usually be resolved by finding the wrong or modified command or setting and either changing it to one that works or revert it back to its original state.

Boot options using the Boot tab

This tab gives you many options for starting up the computer. The top portion of the window contains the start-up file that the computer is using. If there are multiple boot partitions on the computer, you see each listed here. You can change the timeout value for the boot menu. You can clearly see what commands the boot manager is using, to see if there are any issues.

MSCONFIG Boot Tab

(Figure.6: MSCONFIG Boot Tab)

Two of the three buttons provided in this window are for editing purposes and are unavailable by default. There are two options down the side of the page:

Make all boot settings permanent:

Changes made in System Configuration are not tracked. If you want to make changes later, you have to do so manually. Use this feature with caution!

Note: Selecting Normal Startup in the General tab WILL NOT work if this feature is selected. With this setting enabled, you must manually revert any changes that you have made.
Timeout field:

Using MSCONFIG can cause the operating system selection screen to display for thirty seconds. As a result, thirty seconds are added to the overall startup time. To prevent the operating selection screen from appearing for thirty seconds on startup, change the timeout line in the Timeout field to zero.

The only button that is not unavailable under the Boot tab, is the Advanced Options. Clicking the Advanced Options button brings up the Boot Advanced Options dialog box. Usually you do not use these options, but they can come in handy. Such as if you suspect that a boot issue is being caused by having multiple processors. You can limit the number of processors used to boot the computer by selecting the Number of Processors check box and specifying a number.

MSCONFIG Advanced Boot

(Figure.7: MSCONFIG BOOT Advanced Options)

Note: I would not advise using this option unless you fully understand what each action should do and what effect you can expect to see.

Boot option choices

The most valuable functions on the Boot tab are the boot options. You can use these choices for various troubleshooting.

Safe boot Minimal:

On startup, opens the Windows graphical user interface (GUI) Windows Explorer in safe mode running only critical services. Networking is disabled

Safe boot Alternate shell:

On startup, opens the Windows command prompt in safe mode running only critical services. Networking and the GUI are disabled.

Safe boot Active Directory repair:

On startup, opens the Windows GUI in safe mode running critical services and Active Directory

Safe boot Network:

On startup, opens the Windows GUI in safe mode running only critical services and networking is enabled

No GUI boot:

It does not display the Windows Welcome screen when starting

Boot log:

Stores all information from the startup process in the file %SystemRoot%Ntbtlog.txt

Base video:

On startup, opens the Windows GUI in minimal Visual Graphics Adapter (VGA) mode. This loads standard VGA drivers instead of display drivers specific to the video hardware on the computer

OS boot information:

Shows driver names as drivers are loaded during the startup process

Advanced>Number of processors:

This can limit the number of processors used on a multiprocessor. If the check box is selected, the computer boots using only the number of processors in the drop-down list.

Advanced>Maximum memory:

This specifies the maximum amount of physical memory used by the operating system to simulate a low memory configuration. The value in the text box is megabytes (MB).

Advanced>Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) Lock:

It prevents Windows from reallocating I/O and Interrupt Request (IRQ) resources on the PCI bus. The I/O and memory resources set by the BIOS are preserved.

Advanced>Debug:

Enables kernel-mode debugging for device driver development

Advanced>Global debug settings:

These are the debugger connection settings on this computer. To let a kernel debugger, communicate with a debugger host. The debugger connection between the host and target computers can be Serial, IEEE 1394, or USB 2.0.

Advanced>Debug port:

Specifies using Serial as the connection type and the serial port and the default port is COM1

Advanced>Baud rate:

Specifies the baud rate to use when Debug port is selected and the debug connection type is Serial. This setting is optional. Valid values for baud are 9600, 19,200, 38,400, 57,600, and 115,200. The default baud rate is 115,200 bps.

Advanced>Channel:

Use channel 1394 as the debug connection type and it specifies the channel number to use. The value for channel must be a decimal integer between 0 and 62, inclusive, and must match the channel number used by the host computer. The channel specified does not depend on the physical 1394 port chosen on the adapter. The default value for channel is 0.

Advanced>USB target name:

Specifies a string value to use when the debug type is USB and this string can be any value


How to use MSCONFIG to troubleshoot a Conflict Issue

 

  • Conflict Issues: These are issues such as drivers, services, or updates that have loaded and have changed another file or are trying to use the same resources as an existing file or device. To troubleshoot these issues, we try to disable different files and services temporarily until we identify the conflict at which time we can either load another file that does the same job or update and reinstall both files.

Working with the Services tab

Note: At any point during troubleshooting the services using MSCONFIG, you can always return to the default settings by selecting Normal Startup.
 

The MSCONFIG Services tab lists integrated Windows services and programs that start when Windows 10 and 11 starts. The Windows operating system periodically runs them itself. You must be careful when disabling services as many are critical to the computer's operation. Enable or disable programs or services from starting by checking or disabling the checkbox next to the program name. This is useful when you are troubleshooting service-related problems.

MSCONFIG Services Tab

(Figure.8: MSCONFIG Services Tab)

Microsoft have designed most of the services in Windows 10 and 11 themselves. To make it easier to find third-party services, you can click the Hide All Microsoft Services button.

 
Note: Selecting Disable all does not disable some secure Microsoft services required for the operating system to start.

Troubleshooting using the Startup tab

MSCONFIG Startup Tab

(Figure.9: MSCONFIG Startup Tab)

This tab is used to allow you to prevent items in your startup folder from starting when you log in. You now get a clickable link to the Windows 10 and 11 Task Manager which controls this function now.

The Startup tab of the Task Manager shows a list of the current software applications that open automatically after Windows opens. It shows the status of each app. Disable individual software applications by highlighting the application and click Disable.

MSCONFIG Task Manager Start-Up Tab

(Figure.10: MSCONFIG Task Manager Start-Up Tab)

Note: Disabling applications that run at startup might result in related applications starting more slowly or not running as expected.
 
Note: You must know what a service does, before you decide to disable it permanently. You can always run a search in Bing  This hyperlink is taking you to a website outside of Dell Technologies. or Google  This hyperlink is taking you to a website outside of Dell Technologies. for the service. That would supply an explanation of what that service does for your machine. Alternatively you can go to one of the various third-party pages  This hyperlink is taking you to a website outside of Dell Technologies. and see if you can match your service against one of their lists.

Using the Tools tab.

MSCONFIG Tools Tab

(Figure.11: MSCONFIG Tools Tab)

The Tools tab lists diagnostic tools and other advanced tools that you can run to improve computer performance. Read the description next to the name of the tool to better understand its function before you open it. To open a tool, select the name of the tool from the list and click the Launch button. These are tools that are built into the operating system like event viewer and such, but they are all gathered in one place under this tab.

Once any changes have been made, you are asked to restart when you close the MSCONFIG utility. You must check if the changes affected what happens on restart. If they have you can keep them and continue to narrow the issue down. If they do not, revert back to the defaults and try again with different changes.

MSCONFIG Computer Restart Message

(Figure.12: MSCONFIG Computer Restart Message)

Note: If this does not resolve your issue, then you can contact your local Technical Support for further troubleshooting. Troubleshooting out of warranty products is chargeable.

Affected Products

Alienware, Inspiron, Legacy Desktop Models, OptiPlex, Vostro, XPS, G Series, G Series, Alienware, Inspiron, Latitude, Vostro, XPS, Legacy Laptop Models, Fixed Workstations
Article Properties
Article Number: 000136771
Article Type: How To
Last Modified: 21 Aug 2024
Version:  6
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