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Helpful answers
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Dec 7, 2014 10:01 AM in response to nleseulby johnny van rocker,I've did a force quit of the DiskUnmountWatcher. I'm still having the same results.
The operation can't be completed because the item is in use.
I'm not sure what else to try at this point.
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Dec 21, 2014 9:33 AM in response to johnny van rockerby Vulf,Evernote Helper seems to have been the culprit for me.
I tried disabling DiskUnmountWatcher, with no success. Then I tried disabling Evernote Helper and I was able to copy files to my network drive. So, if you have Evernote, try quitting Evernote and disabling Evernote Helper. You may have to go to Evernote Preferences and uncheck the box that allows Evernote Helper to run in the background even if Evernote is not running.
When I restarted Evernote, I was no longer able to transfer files to my network drive, getting the same message about the file being in use. I have no idea why Evernote causes this conflict, but I'm glad I found a solution. Hope this helps someone.
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Jan 14, 2015 8:30 AM in response to Vulfby rootus3r,All you need to do is go into terminal and type the following:
sudo cp -R folder/* destination/folder/
This will tell you what files are not giving you permission to copy/move.
Then go and change the permissions on those files using chmod. (http://www.maclife.com/article/columns/terminal_101_file_permissions)
chmod 777 is probably the easier way. Then perform the same copy operation again and you are good to go.
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Apr 30, 2015 6:33 AM in response to rootus3rby TruthSkunk,The issue began with me when I upgrade to Yosemite (I skipped Mavericks).
Permissions are not the issue.
The entire files copy - completely - then I get the error at the end. If there were permission issues the error would occur as soon as the copy was first attempted.
Permissions are not the issue.
If I keep trying over and over, the file will eventually will copy successfully with no changes to any permissions between attempts. If there were permission issues the copy would never be successful without changing permissions.
Permissions are not the issue.
I tried quitting/disabling DiskUnmountWatcher but that didn't help me. I do not have Evernote nor any EvernoteHelper running. However, these clues about DiskUnmountWatcher and EvernoteHelper may point toward the root cause: "something" is occasionally (randomly?) opening/locking these files either on the local drive or on the network drive. I'll keep poking around to see if I can tell what that "something" is.
My current work-around is to use the "cp" command (I'm not using "sudo" - permissions are not the issue). I haven't received an error using "cp" yet but I've only used it for a handful of files. I need to copy a lot more files before I'm convinced using "cp" is a reliable work-around.
I'll report back when I have a better idea about other processes and the reliability of this work-around.
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May 8, 2015 10:25 AM in response to TruthSkunkby TruthSkunk,After a week of using "cp" on the command line, I'm confident in saying this is a viable work-around. No issues whatsoever using "cp" with single or multiple files.
This is obviously a Finder issue and has nothing to do with the ability to actually copy files.
It could be related to the hidden files that AFS is dead set on putting everywhere it can. That might explain why you can copy using Finder sometimes and you can't other times (timing of the reading/writing of those hidden files???) - but I can't be sure about that.
I disabled creating the .DS_Store files (using "
defaults write com.apple.desktopservices DSDontWriteNetworkStores true") but that did not prevent the issue. I also turned on Blue Parrot (which tries to do the same thing) but that made no difference either (nor did killing that process).For me, the issue only occurs when using Finder to copy large files from my local hard drive to a network drive - those that take long enough to copy that the progress bar appears. I never get the error when copying small files or even large groups of small files. I don't get the error when copying large files locally. I don't get the error when copying large files from a network drive to my local hard drive.
For now - I'll use "cp" to copy large files to a network drive.
C'mon Apple - fix this! It's been around for a couple major OS upgrades already!
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May 20, 2015 2:46 PM in response to TruthSkunkby philmiamiflorida,WHY do I have to use TERMINAL and CP?
I force stopped Diskunmount blah blah blah whatever
I have 10.10.3 and yes, when the file is 1Gb or more, I get can not complete blah blah blah is in use, EVEN when copying the .MP4 video by itself.
this is to a QNAP TS-419P+ and FIRST I copied the folder to my desktop
BUT
when I copied from SDcard straight to a DLINK DNS-323 NAS WITHOUT going to my desktop it went right thru
I mean whats the ******* problem Apple?
need a terminal command to fix it
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May 25, 2015 10:19 AM in response to philmiamifloridaby Johny5,★HelpfulThere is a workaround that does actually work, albeit it it is painful...
I have no idea why Apple hasn't fixed this.
I use SAMBA shares from a QNAP and if you try and copy multiple files to the QNAP then it fails pretty much every time.
the workaround is to create a folder in the location where all your local files are.
Then, move all the files into the folder.
Lastly, drag the folder itself over on to the share where you want to copy it.
Obviously when its gone across you can move the files out of the temp folder you created.
Not ideal but it works every time for me.
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May 31, 2015 8:23 PM in response to TruthSkunkby duknutter,Perfect work around works like a treat and now I will be happy as I can transfer to my media network without getting that stupid message... My hat goes of to you.
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Jun 30, 2015 11:47 PM in response to Frank.A.Klassenby mehighpenet,MY SOLUTION:
copy entire folder not individual files
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Jul 3, 2015 4:54 PM in response to mehighpenetby V Dubreeze,Happens regularly to me with files within folders, copying large folders to a different drive. It's not the "file in use" problem, but the "already exists" one.
Only solution I have found is, when wishing to update a backed up folder, make sure the old one is buried down in another folder. I can drag a copy to the drive top level. Then dragging it to copy over the outdated folder asks the alert question and then does it correctly. If I try to replace an old folder with a new one directly I get the same name alert, I click OK, it copies nearly to the end and then says it can't be completed because a file with that name already exists. It's a huge problem doing things like backing up image libraries which are separate folders each containing 30 or 40 gigs of images and project info.
I don't use any of the softwares mentioned in this thread. On BOTH a 2011 MBP with 10.9.5 and a 2008 MBP with 10.6.8.
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Jul 3, 2015 11:48 PM in response to V Dubreezeby FrenchToast,I've often used FreeFileSync for Windows (here's the link for OS X: https://www.freefilesync.org/), and it does a real fine job.
Doesn't work on SL anymore, though, and that's a shame.
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Jul 19, 2015 9:27 PM in response to FrenchToastby DraconXanathos,Finally something helped me resolved this issue! Thank you!
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Jul 24, 2015 1:32 PM in response to james_wrightby Mr_Rodacre,Had a similar problem moving files from desktop to a network drive. The "File is in use" message would pop up for no apparent reason - even after restart.
The files in question were all titled "filename.mp4" I simply retitled them by removing the .mp4 appendage like "filename" and the files had no trouble transferring after that.
Don't know if that will work on all file types or in all situations but it seemed to work. Also should note that it didn't happen on all of the .mp4 files I had either.
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Aug 13, 2015 1:54 AM in response to james_wrightby alanbirtles,I'm pretty sure this is caused when attempting to create resource forks, unfortunately apple in its infinite wisdom doesn't provide any way to prevent resource fork creation