Process Monitor v4.0 and Sysmon 1.3.3 for Linux

  • Thread starter Thread starter Alex_Mihaiuc
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Alex_Mihaiuc

Process Monitor v4.0

This update to Process Monitor, a utility for observing real-time file system, Registry, and process or thread activity, adds user interface improvements, enhances search, filtering and event counting performance, and introduces a new event column for the process start timestamp.


The new column, Process Start, can be used to filter processes by their start times - for example to hide all processes that were running when this Process Monitor session started, or to only show those processes. In the Process Monitor Filter dialog, this column will have the timestamp of the current time as a pre-filled value in the drop-down. Copying and pasting a value from any of the timestamp columns in the main event list also works.



The user interface improvements in this version include a more native look to the dark theme, new interface icons, more consistent behaviors for the summary dialogs accessible through the Tools menu, better mouse and keyboard navigation, and template values autofilled to some of the filter columns. The summary dialogs now have the "Edit Filter" option, and the main event list supports a per-column "Count Occurrences" action.



We have fixed two Boot Logging bugs: one that incorrectly stopped the log after 428 seconds with profiling events enabled and one that incompletely initialized module symbol information with the /ConvertBootLog command line option.



Copying items to the clipboard from the main event list is faster and also displays the interruptible progress dialog visible with other time consuming operations throughout Procmon.



There are also a series of UI element alignment fixes, we updated the online search from the event properties dialog, the dialogs' geometry, we enabled runtime checks, and made a series of security improvements.




Sysmon 1.3.3 for Linux

This update to Sysmon for Linux fixes an issue running on Linux kernel 6.6+, and adds restart on failure for the service.

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