PID: 1234 - explorer.exe Rank DLL Name Working Set (KB) 1 C:\Windows\System32\shell32.dll 12,456 2 C:\Program Files\CloudPlugin.dll 8,234 3 C:\Windows\System32\ole32.dll 3,112 ... Since dlltop isn’t built into Windows, here’s a quick script to get similar insight:
dlltop -p 1234 -s workingSet This command targets PID 1234 and sorts loaded DLLs by working set size (physical memory). Sample output: dlltop
Have you ever debugged a rogue DLL? Share your story in the comments below. Found this useful? Subscribe to our newsletter for more Windows internals deep-dives. PID: 1234 - explorer
Get-Process -Id 1234 | Select-Object -ExpandProperty Modules | Sort-Object -Property Size -Descending | Select-Object -First 10 ModuleName, FileName, Size For live updates, wrap it in a loop: Share your story in the comments below
If you’ve ever used top on Linux or Task Manager on Windows, you’re familiar with the need to see which processes are consuming your CPU and memory. But what if you need to see which are consuming resources inside a specific process? Enter dlltop .
Download Sysinternals listdlls.exe and pipe it to sort – that’s your manual dlltop . Better yet, write your own version with psutil in Python for cross-platform DLL tracking.
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