comptia-a-plus-core2/notes/OS-3-windows-admin-tools.md

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OS-3: Windows Administrative Tools

Status: not started

Domain:

  • 1.0 Operating Systems

What You Need To Know

The exam often describes a problem and expects you to pick the right Windows tool.

Core tools:

  • Task Manager: view running apps/processes, resource use, startup apps, and end unresponsive tasks.
  • Services: start, stop, restart, disable, or change startup type for Windows services.
  • Event Viewer: read logs for errors, warnings, failed services, application crashes, security events, and system events.
  • Device Manager: manage hardware devices, drivers, disabled devices, and driver rollback.
  • Disk Management: create, format, extend, shrink, and assign drive letters to partitions/volumes.
  • System Configuration (msconfig): troubleshooting startup configuration and boot options.
  • Local Users and Groups: manage local users and local group membership.
  • Performance Monitor: collect detailed performance counters over time.
  • Resource Monitor: live view of CPU, memory, disk, and network activity.
  • Task Scheduler: run programs or scripts automatically based on time or events.

Memory Tricks

Use the problem wording:

  • "What happened?" = Event Viewer
  • "What hardware/driver?" = Device Manager
  • "What starts with Windows?" = Task Manager or System Configuration
  • "What service is stopped?" = Services
  • "What partition/drive letter?" = Disk Management
  • "What account/group?" = Local Users and Groups
  • "What is slow right now?" = Resource Monitor
  • "What is slow over time?" = Performance Monitor
  • "Run this automatically" = Task Scheduler

Commands To Enter

Enter these on Windows PowerShell or Command Prompt:

taskmgr

What it does:

  • Opens Task Manager.
  • Use it to view processes, performance, startup apps, and signed-in users.
services.msc

What it does:

  • Opens the Services console.
  • Use it to start, stop, restart, disable, or change startup type for services.
eventvwr.msc

What it does:

  • Opens Event Viewer.
  • Use it to investigate system, application, setup, and security logs.
devmgmt.msc

What it does:

  • Opens Device Manager.
  • Use it to check hardware status and manage drivers.
diskmgmt.msc

What it does:

  • Opens Disk Management.
  • Use it to manage partitions, volumes, and drive letters.
msconfig

What it does:

  • Opens System Configuration.
  • Use it for boot and startup troubleshooting.
lusrmgr.msc

What it does:

  • Opens Local Users and Groups on supported Windows editions.
  • Use it to manage local accounts and group membership.
  • This is not available on all Home editions.
perfmon

What it does:

  • Opens Performance Monitor.
  • Use it for detailed performance counters and longer-term monitoring.
resmon

What it does:

  • Opens Resource Monitor.
  • Use it for live CPU, memory, disk, and network activity.
taskschd.msc

What it does:

  • Opens Task Scheduler.
  • Use it to create, view, and troubleshoot scheduled tasks.

Linux comparison commands:

ps aux

What it does:

  • Lists running processes.
top

What it does:

  • Shows live process and resource usage.
systemctl status

What it does:

  • Shows systemd service manager status.
  • You can also check a specific service, such as systemctl status ssh.
journalctl -p err

What it does:

  • Shows systemd journal entries with error priority.
lsblk

What it does:

  • Lists disks and partitions.

Mini Lab

Goal:

  • Match tools to symptoms and practice safe viewing commands.

Windows:

  1. Open Task Manager with taskmgr.
  2. Open Event Viewer with eventvwr.msc.
  3. In Event Viewer, view Windows Logs > System.
  4. Open Device Manager with devmgmt.msc.
  5. Open Disk Management with diskmgmt.msc.
  6. Open Resource Monitor with resmon.
  7. Record which tool you would use for:
    • Failed service startup:
    • Missing driver:
    • Drive letter change:
    • Slow disk right now:
    • Long-term CPU tracking:

Linux:

  1. Run ps aux.
  2. Run top, then press q to quit.
  3. Run systemctl status.
  4. Run journalctl -p err.
  5. Run lsblk.
  6. Record the Linux command closest to:
    • Task Manager:
    • Event Viewer:
    • Services:
    • Disk Management:

Quick Check Before Quiz

You are ready for the OS-3 quiz when you can answer these without looking:

  • Which tool shows Windows logs?
  • Which tool manages drivers?
  • Which tool manages partitions and drive letters?
  • Which tool shows live resource usage?
  • Which tool runs jobs automatically?