HuangTM,
The issue was that as soon as you clicked "Start
Recording" in the wizard and it popped up IE6 the memory
usage would start jumping in 10-15 MB increments until it
hit 2GB, although the memory wasn't actually been used by
any particular process, the Task Manager graph was just
showing this much memory in use.
Although this was all last week, since then I have
downgraded my Exchange Messenger from 5.0 to 4.7 because
it was causing VirtualPC to crash (Might want to test
that and file a bug report - On WinXP if you have
Messenger 5.0 for Exchange (signed in), VirtualPC would
crash as soon as you try and start a VirtualPC) and this
has seemed to fix the ACT issue as well.
So I am alright for this issue now, however it happened
on this PC when I didn't even have Messenger 5, so I
reimaged my PC back to the standard ghost image we have
and it still didn't work, but then now it has started
working. I don't know if it has been reported to
Microsoft as a bug before, I searched Google for an
answer and only saw one other posting in a newsgroup that
didn't have an answer to it.
Thanks,
Chris.
[quoted text, click to view] >-----Original Message-----
>Hi Chris,
>
>Thanks for your post. As I understand, the problem you
are facing is that
>the memory usage raises sharply and cause "Not enough
storage ..." error
>when you testing a web project with ACT. Please correct
me if there is any
>misunderstanding.
>
>I recommend you close/stop all the other unnecessary
application/services
>(say, anti-virus application) when testing. In addition,
to narrow down the
>problem, please check whether or the problem still
exists if you test
>against a simple wizard-generated only ASP .NET web
application. Please
>also keep Task Manager open while testing and check
which process uses up
>the memory.
>
>I look forward to hearing from you.
>
>Have a nice day! :)
>
>Regards,
>
>HuangTM
>Microsoft Online Partner Support
>MCSE/MCSD
>
>Get Secure! --
www.microsoft.com/security >This posting is provided "as is" with no warranties and
confers no rights.
>
>.