Working while repairing disk permissions?

Is it ok to do remedial tasks while repairing disk permissions, such as surfing the net, checking email,etc? As long as I'm not installing anything or making system changes?
Thanks,
Wesley

yes, it's quite ok to work while repair permissions runs.

Similar Messages

  • I recently repaired disk permissions on my mac HD and now my on-board speakers wont work, the icon is greyed out and only works when my headphones are plugged in.

    I recently repaired disk permissions on my mac HD and now my on-board speakers wont work, the icon is greyed out and only works when my headphones are plugged in

    Try to put your headphones several times in and out from your connection, might be the switch is stuck. Normally it should work again while trying to plug the headphones in and out!

  • Repairing Disk Permissions - Not Working with Lion

    I simply am not able to repair disk permissions when my Mac is booted normally - the disk utility hangs and never stops - when I boot in recovery more I can run the utility just fine - and then boot as normal.  I am wondering what might be causing this or if anyone else is having a similar problem?

    With Lion, it is best to do any disk repairs via the recovery partition
    And why do you say that?  I have heard no such thing, and this was never the case with previous systems.  It has always been recommended to repair permissions while booted from the system whose permissions need to be repaired.  Do you have documentation that this recommendation has changed?
    Joe, repairing permissions works fine for me without needing to boot into recovery mode.  Are you giving it plenty of time to finish?  Sometimes it may seem to be frozen... sticking on "less than a minute" for well more than a minute, for example.  Have you repaired the hard drive (which you do need to boot from the recovery partition to do)?

  • Constantly repairing disk permissions for Spotlight to work

    I am constantly having to use Disk Utility and repair my disk permissions in order to get Spotlight to work. Often I'll type something such as an application and the only thing that will show up is the Definition from the dictionary.
    Repairing the disk permissions seems to fix the problem, but it doesn't take long before I need to once again go in and repair in order to get Spotlight working again. I've tried dragging the whole hard drive into the exclusions list and then removing it again so the index will rebuild. That also works but again only lasts a short time.
    Any help would be much appreciated!

    whiskey sour wrote:
    I hear a lot about 'defraggin' in Windows. Is there something similar in Mac, ie: is Repairing Disk Permissions something similar?
    They're entirely different things. A "defragment" operation moves files around to combine split segments of files and consolidate free space. A "repair permissions" operation examines the permissions settings of system files and resets any that seem to be wrong.
    Here's what Apple has to say about defragmenting a Mac disk:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1634

  • Superdrive replacement not working? Try "repair disk permissions"

    Like many other folks, the superdrive in my iMac 7,1 died. I ordered a replacement from Powerbookmedic and installed it following ifixit's guides. Upon booting the iMac I found that the SuperDrive would accept a disc and the iMac saw the SuperDrive but OS X wouldn't recognize any disc I put in the drive and after trying to read it would eject it. After trying various things, I found that other users on my iMac were able to use the new drive just fine, it just wasn't working for me.
    I tried various fixes but in the end "repair disk permissions" under disk utility did the trick. Posting here in the hopes of helping others. Joel

    I cant access any of the files on the hard drive to back up. Do you know of a link on how to format and reinstall. It would be my first time. I have diskwarrior and it will not load at all.
    Under the Erease tab I have
    MAC OS Extended
    MAC OS Extended (Journaled)
    MAC OS Extended Case Sensitive
    MAC OS Extended Case Sensitive journaled
    MS-DOS Fat

  • Repair disk permissions does not work

    Repair disk permissions does not work. Disk Uitliy fines many incorrect permissions (ACL found, but not expected) and says that it would repair it. However, when checked again, it finds the same permission errors.
    I have tried Disk Utility as well as the command line "sudo diskutil repairPermissions /" (which probably does exactly the same as Disk Utility).
    Any hints?
    C.

    Are you trying to Repair Permissions because you have file access problems in the System files, or just because you think you need to do it?
    If the former, please explain what you are seeing. If the latter, stop wasting your time.
    The things it doesn't repair are not repaired because there is nothing broken. The orginal Receipts files have the old settings, and subsequent updates have changed the permissions on those things to what they should be, now. It will report the differences it finds every time you run Repair Permissions because they will always be different and they should be the way they are.

  • Repair Disk Permissions not working?

    Based on a printer problem, HP suggested that I run Repair Disk Permissions. I did, generating 9 pages of fixes.  But if I clear the history and run it again immediately, the same list of repairs is generated, suggesting that nothing was fixed.

    It's no problem, see this
    https://support.apple.com/kb/TS1448?locale=da_DK

  • Repair Disk Permissions utility stalled - I have read the knowledge base

    I have researched the knowledge base and search for posts on this and cannot find answer: Running 10.4 at the latest version. used the original install 1 disc I received with Tiger to repair disc permissions (like Apple support has told me to do in the past, but my current research said I do not need to do this unless certain parameters are met, and none of the parameters applied, but oh well, I am here anyway). Cold Boot from the original install disc 1 and slected the start up disk I use (I only have one start up disc/drive). Did a repair disc permissions and got a long running routine that reporting a lot of fixes, then the utility has stalled -- no progress on the progress bar. I "stopped" the process using the "stop repair" button (three times). The log reflected the utility stopped, but the progress bar still is blue and not moving (for a couple of hours). When I go to quity File >Disk Utility, it warns me that Disk Utility is running and this may make my system unstable/unsuable.
    QUESTION: CAN I JUST QUIT DISK UTILITY AND NOT HAVE ANY ADVERSE AFFECT ON MY IMAC DRIVE?

    Thanks for your advice, I still have an issue:
    -after the first repair disk permission "stalled" process, I exited Disk Utility and cold booted the machine after I had disconnected all external devices other than the original iMac keyboard
    -obtained the combo patch for 10.4.7 from the Apple download site (it had already been installed but I reinstalled per your advice)
    -re-applied the combo patch and then did another cold boot
    -ran Disk Utility from the original Tiger install #1 disk, and then selected "repair disk permissions" for my start up disk (I only have one)
    - process ran for 10 minutes or so then gave the following error message: "Disk Utility Error: Disk Utility has lost its connection with disk utility management tool and cannot continue. Please quit disk utility and re-launch disk utility"
    - I pushed the "stop disk permission repair" button, then quit disk utility, then cold booted the machine again.
    -re-applied combo patch as above, then cold booted the machine
    -ran disk utility from the original iMac install #1 disk, ran "repair disk permissions", and then received the same error message as above.
    - I then just quit Disk Utility and cold booted the machine again and went about my business. There does not seem to be any problem with the machine (was not before, but I ran repair permissions thinkging this was a routine maintenance taks that should be run)
    - in my prior search of the knowledge base, I found the following information about repair disk permissions:
    Location: http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=607495&#607495
    How often should I Repair Permissions?
    You do not need to Repair Permissions on a regular basis.
    There are only three occasions you need to do this:
    1. When you have just installed something that required you to run an Installer, rather than just copying some software to a folder. This should be done for both Apple and non-Apple software.
    2. When you have been working on your OS X files or folders while booted from OS 9, or remotely connected via a non-OS X machine, since OS 9 and other systems do not handle OS X's permissions correctly.
    3. The other case is if your system is behaving strangely, when you should run Disk Repair from your CD followed by Repair Permissions. This is just to eliminate these things before going on to further trouble-shooting.
    Otherwise you can happily forget about Permissions!"
    So, it would appear I do not need to do anything else; the machine seems to be working properly. Is there anything else I need to do? thanks for the help! Bob

  • All external Drives stopped mounting after repair disk permissions

    My 2.3 GhzPPC G5 10.4.11 was running a bit slow so I ran repair disk permissions and now none of my external drives will mount, can't see them in disk utility either.
    Drives work fine on my macbook pro.
    I've searched for help but no luck..
    Thanks for any advice...

    Neil, you really should repair the disk before repairing permissions.
    Could be many things, we should start with this...
    "Try Disk Utility
    1. Insert the Mac OS X Tiger Install disc that came with your computer, then restart the computer while holding the C key.
    2. When your computer finishes starting up from the disc, choose Disk Utility from the Installer menu. (In Mac OS X 10.4 or later, you must select your language first.)
    *Important: Do not click Continue in the first screen of the Installer. If you do, you must restart from the disc again to access Disk Utility.*
    3. Click the First Aid tab.
    4. Select your Mac OS X volume.
    5. Click Repair. Disk Utility checks and repairs the disk."
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214
    Then try a Safe Boot, (holding Shift key down at bootup), run Disk Utility in Applications>Utilities, then highlight your drive, click on Repair Permissions, reboot when it completes.
    (Safe boot may stay on the gray radian for a long time, let it go, it's trying to repair the Hard Drive.)
    How to reset the SMU on a Power Mac G5 (Late 2004) or Power Mac G5 (Late 2005) ...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1436

  • Repair Disk Permissions Unavailable in Disk Utility

    I just went to repair the Disk Permissions on one of my 4 internal hard drive and the tabs for Verify & Repair Disk Permissions were grayed out. I checked the other internal hard drives as well as my external drives connected via SATA and Firewire and the tabs are all the same. The only drive that the tabs are available is my internal startup drive. I have a memory that these tabs to verify and repair have always been available on all drives - am I remembering incorrectly? Any ideas? Thanks.

    roam:
    Repair Permissions is only available to do, on the drive that you are booted into.
    I wondered about that, and before my previous post I tested it by launching DU while booted from my internal HDD and connected to an external FW HDD with two partitions, as well as to a USB HDD with my Time Machine backup. If I selected the FW HDD (Manufacturer ID) or either volume on it I could Verify or Repair Disk Permissions, as well as Verify or Repair Disk. It will Repair the TM backup, but not do anything with Disk Permissions. Of course, I am booted from Snow Leopard and did not test this while booted from an earlier OS, but, if I recall correctly, it worked the same way in Tiger and Panther.
    cornelius

  • You May Want to Repair Disk Permissions After Printer Updates Today

    It's been pretty automatic for quite a while--install printer updates and then repair disk permissions.  Most of the time, the permissions errors aren't critical and everything still works; however, many people like to keep their boot disk permissions fixed.
    After installing "HewlettPackardPrinterDrivers2.7.2" and "BrotherPrinterDrivers2.7" today I again repaired permissions.  The errors weren't critical, but I can't remember seeing more of them than I did today.  Make sure and scroll the list of errors because if you don't have scroll bars showing all the time, it doesn't look like there is much in the way of errors.  When I didn't see a scroll bar, I assumed there were only a few errors--wrong.
      My installation was on a Lion system.  And, Disk Utility did fix them all.  None were there when I repaired permissions a second time.
    Just an FYI.

    Which MacBook model? Did it come with OSX 10.6 or did you upgrade it?

  • Can't repair disk permissions, System Updates wont install

    Hi there,
    I wondered, why any system update wont install on my MacBook Pro with Leopard 10.5.5. So I tried to repair disk permissions which causes an error that calls something like "there is an error in quitting the process" (sorry ... have only the german version, so this is nearly what it says).
    Repairing the permissions from a Leopard DVD ends up the same way.
    Repairing the harddisk works fine.
    Updating the 10.5.5 Combo Update quits with an error that says "The Installation package couldn't install some of the files in "/". Contact the Manufacturer."
    Any ideas what this could be ? Thought it startet a couple of days ago with the installation of a new Java Version, but I'm not sure if this causes any problems.
    Thanks for any suggestions

    ok,
    I've found this in the logfiles:
    Started verify/repair permissions on disk disk0s2 Macintosh HD
    Error -9972: The underlying task reported failure on exit
    Finished verify/repair permissions on disk disk0s2 Macintosh HD
    Error detected while verifying/repairing permissions on disk0s2 Macintosh HD: The underlying task reported failure on exit (-9972)
    Repairing the keychains worked fine but didn't solve the problem at all.

  • Anyone clean their mac using the disk utility using the repair disk permissions??

    anyone clean their mac using the disk utility using the repair disk permissions??

    No. Threads don't hurt anything. If your computer is not functioning properly perhaps you need to try some basic maintenance. Let's start by having you do this:
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    Next, try booting into Safe Mode then immediately restart normally. Safe mode is going to take a while so be patient. It's slow.
    Next, create a new user account. Log out of your account then log into the new account. Try using iPhoto and the publishing button. Do they work now?
    If you still have a problem, then do the following. If you don't want to go through the above then just start with the following and forget the others above.
    Reinstall OS X without erasing the drive
    1. Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    2. Reinstall Snow Leopard
    If the drive is OK then quit DU and return to the installer.  Proceed with reinstalling OS X.  Note that the Snow Leopard installer will not erase your drive or disturb your files.  After installing a fresh copy of OS X the installer will move your Home folder, third-party applications, support items, and network preferences into the newly installed system.
    Download and install Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1.

  • Installing a trial version of the Illustrator and InDesign App in Creative Cloud on my Mac is impossible. Keep getting 'Installation failed' notices. More information gives 0 fatal error(s), 0 error(s). Already repaired disk permissions in Disk Utility bu

    Installing a trial version of the Illustrator and InDesign App in Creative Cloud on my Mac is impossible. Keep getting 'Installation failed' notices. More information gives 0 fatal error(s), 0 error(s). Already repaired disk permissions in Disk Utility but nothing seems to work. Exit code: 7.

    Hi Maarton,
    Please follow the link to resolve the issue: Errors "Exit Code: 6," "Exit Code: 7" | CS5, CS5.5
    -Ankit

  • Repair Disk Permissions Issues

    I'm not sure I am posting this in the correct community but here goes . . .
    I have a 17" Macbook Pro running the latest version of Snow Leopard. It is almost 2 years old and I have 4 gb RAM.
    Recently, it seems to be slowing down and I have to run repair disk permissions 2-3 times a week to recoup a little speed. I also delete my Firefox cache regularly to try to gain a little there. I do make a few videos in iMovie and initially I thought that was the problem but this week I have not really worked in iMovie much and it is still slow. There seems to be some issues in the log of the repair permissions. I hope they show in this image. I don't know what these mean or how to fix them. It is the "permissions differ" entries I am confused about.

    You can ignore those permissions per support article
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TA21090
    Since you brought up iMove, I suspect your storage is nearly full as this most certainly causes the computer to slow down. video files are the biggest culprit.
    Look in your Activity Monitor and reduce the drive space by copying to a external, Disk Utility HFS+ formatted external powered drive of unnecessary files so your boot drive is ideally below 50% filled (yea I know but the computer slows down after that) and not more than 75% filled.
    Once you have done that. Get another newer external powered HFS drive and download the free Carbon Copy Cloner and clone the internal drive to the external.
    Hold option and boot off the external clone, test it out then use Disk Utility to erase the internal and then reverse clone the external onto the internal, this will defragment and optimize your drive so the OS and programs are on the fast part of the drive, not the slow parts.
    Reboot into the internal and run off of the free OnyX's maintainence and cleaning aspects and reboot.
    http://www.titanium.free.fr/
    Sir speedy machine here we come!
    Now of course you may have other issues that could be causing your slow down, like not enough RAM or some sort of failed process or leftover program, tweaks or simply a slow Internet.
    You can opt to simply reinstall OS X 10.6 ( by holding c and booting off the installer disk ) over your installed version (doesn't touch files or programs) then immediatly Software Updating until clear, that will clean anything hanging out in OS X.
    If you still have slowdowns, then it's in what geeks call "User land" basically something installed outside of root, like a program or only runs in user, not in OS X.
    For that you need to create a new user, transfer your files via the Shared Drop and wean yourself off the old user and finally delete it. Also install all new versions of your third party programs removing the originals first.
    That should do it.

Maybe you are looking for

  • How to track query variable input in FM

    Hi All, There are a MultiCube1 and a Query1 based on it. There is Virtual Infoprovider1 based on Query1. And finaly there is a Query2 based on Virtual Provider1. How to check inputed variables of Query2 in FM for Virtual Provider1.

  • Conditional logic execution

    Hi folks, I'm pretty sure that, strictly speaking, this isn't possible, but I'm hoping someone has found a workaround. I want to run logic on a set of data ONLY if the dimension members used contain certain flags (for example, only run logic when the

  • Updating iweb on Mobile Me

    I have changed just one page of my iweb site and select update only changed pages. It seems that the update refreshes all pages and that takes too long. Am I missing something?

  • Locked partition that won't unlock

    a friend of mine who works for a school system got an ibook provided by the school. it came with two partitions, the first has the OS on it and is fine. the second appears in the finder with a lock superimposed on the disk icon. i can view the conten

  • Activate automatically tansport list

    Hi all, I have a probleme with the activation manually tansports lists. In fact, We will transport our développement PI (500 OT) from quality in production système, and we will proceed by a script. The problem is that after each transport, we must ac