Should I block it?

No, this file is 100% safe to run.

VersionsAdditional versions

2.2.9808 7.50%
2.2.9808 2.50%
2.2.9709 30.00%
2.2.10510 7.50%
2.2.10510 12.50%
2.2.10510 17.50%
2.2.10228 7.50%
2.2.10228 12.50%
2.2.10228 2.50%

Relationships

Parent process
Related files

PE structurePE file structure

Show functions
Import table
advapi32.dll
RegQueryValueExW, RegCloseKey, RegisterServiceCtrlHandlerA, SetServiceStatus, InitializeSecurityDescriptor, SetSecurityDescriptorDacl, StartServiceCtrlDispatcherA, StartServiceA, QueryServiceStatusEx, ControlService, CreateServiceA, OpenSCManagerA, OpenServiceA, CloseServiceHandle, DeleteService, RegOpenKeyExW
kernel32.dll
GetACP, GetLocaleInfoA, GetVersionExA, RaiseException, GetCurrentThreadId, GetLocalTime, WideCharToMultiByte, OutputDebugStringA, FreeLibrary, InterlockedExchange, GetFileAttributesW, GetProcAddress, LoadLibraryW, CreateMutexA, GetPrivateProfileStringW, GetModuleFileNameW, CreateDirectoryA, ReadFile, SetEndOfFile, CreateThread, OpenEventA, SetEvent, CreateEventA, OpenMutexA, CreateProcessA, WaitForSingleObject, CloseHandle, InitializeCriticalSection, GetModuleFileNameA, GetPrivateProfileStringA, DeleteCriticalSection, EnterCriticalSection, LeaveCriticalSection, Sleep, CreateDirectoryW, GetLastError, ExitProcess, RtlUnwind, GetSystemTimeAsFileTime, HeapFree, GetModuleHandleA, GetCommandLineA, HeapAlloc, QueryPerformanceCounter, GetTickCount, GetCurrentProcessId, SetUnhandledExceptionFilter, VirtualQuery, WriteFile, FlushFileBuffers, GetOEMCP, GetCPInfo, TerminateProcess, GetCurrentProcess, VirtualProtect, VirtualAlloc, GetSystemInfo, MultiByteToWideChar, HeapDestroy, HeapCreate, VirtualFree, HeapReAlloc, IsBadWritePtr, HeapSize, GetStdHandle, UnhandledExceptionFilter, FreeEnvironmentStringsA, GetEnvironmentStrings, FreeEnvironmentStringsW, GetEnvironmentStringsW, SetHandleCount, GetFileType, GetStartupInfoA, SetFilePointer, LoadLibraryA, GetStringTypeA, GetStringTypeW, LCMapStringA, LCMapStringW, IsBadReadPtr, IsBadCodePtr, SetStdHandle, CreateFileW, CreateFileA

clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe

CLMSMoni Application by CyberLink (Signed)

Remove clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe
Version:   2.2.10510
MD5:   1353959c5dc99fd81945d9424bffd47e
SHA1:   b2d3fb5bf0a4a6cebb56ca1d07863a3289e816ed

What is clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe?

CyberLink Media Server Monitor Service for Cyberlink Media Library is a management utility designed to organize photos, videos and music files. Cyberlink Media Suite contains a library tagged with uploaded photos to Facebook, capture video clips from a larger video file and a number of other media-related features.

Overview

clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe runs as a service under the name CyberLink PowerDVD 12 Media Server Monitor Service with extensive SYSTEM privileges (full administrator access). This is typically installed with the program CyberLink Media Suite 10 published by CyberLink Corp.. The file is digitally signed by CyberLink which was issued by the VeriSign certificate authority (CA).

DetailsDetails

File name:clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe
Publisher:CyberLink
Product name: CLMSMoni Application
Description:CyberLink Media Server Monitor Service
Typical file path:C:\Program Files\cyberlink\powerdvd12\kernel\dms\clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe
Original name:CLMSMoni.exe
File version:2.2.10510
Size:76.52 KB (78,352 bytes)
Certificate
Issued to:CyberLink
Authority (CA):VeriSign
Digital DNA
File packed:No
.NET CLR:No
More details

ResourcesPrograms

The following program will install this file
CyberLink Corp.
7% remove
Packed with the tools you need, you’ll be able to enjoy Blu-ray and DVD movies, create your own Hollywood productions, share videos and photos to your social communities, organize your media in ways and burn discs to back up your content. With Media Suite, there are no limits to what you can do! CyberLink Media Suite has everything you need to elevate your digital life. One powerful yet easy-to-use solution lets you organize, play, edi...

BehaviorsBehaviors

Service
Runs under 'SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services' by the Service Controller (services.exe)
  • 'CyberLink PowerDVD 12 Media Server Monitor Service'

ResourcesResource utilization

(Note: statistics below are averages based on a minimum sample size of 200 unique participants)
Averages
 
Memory
Private memory:1.05 MB
21.59 MB
Private (maximum):1.74 MB
Private (minimum):750 KB
Non-paged memory:1.05 MB
21.59 MB
Virtual memory:46.32 MB
140.96 MB
Virtual memory (peak):51.88 MB
169.69 MB
Working set:860 KB
18.61 MB
Working set (peak):3.58 MB
37.95 MB
Page faults:1,116/min
2,039/min
I/O
I/O read transfer:4 Bytes/sec
1.02 MB/min
I/O read operations:1/sec
343/min
I/O other transfer:2 Bytes/sec
448.09 KB/min
I/O other operations:1/sec
1,671/min
Resource allocations
Threads:4
12
Handles:70
600

BehaviorsProcess properties

Integrety level:System
Platform:64-bit
Command lines:
  • "C:\Program Files\cyberlink corp\powerdvd12\kernel\dms\clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe"
  • "C:\Program Files\cyberlink\powerdvd12\kernel\dms\clmsmonitorservicepdvd12.exe"
Owner:SYSTEM
Windows Service
Service name:CyberLink PowerDVD 12 Media Server Monitor Service
Description:“CyberLink PowerDVD 12 Media Server Monitor Service.”
Type:Win32OwnProcess, InteractiveProcess
Parent process:services.exe (Services and Controller app by Microsoft)

Windows OS versionsDistribution by Windows OS

OS versiondistribution
Windows 7 Ultimate 40.00%
Windows 7 Home Premium 22.50%
Windows 7 Professional 10.00%
Windows 8 Enterprise 10.00%
Microsoft Windows XP 5.00%
Windows Vista Home Premium 5.00%
Windows 8 Pro 5.00%
Windows 8 2.50%

Distribution by countryDistribution by country

United States installs about 32.50% of CLMSMoni Application.

OEM distributionDistribution by PC manufacturer

PC Manufacturerdistribution
Hewlett-Packard 36.00%
Acer 24.00%
ASUS 16.00%
Dell 16.00%
GIGABYTE 8.00%
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