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Decipher panic report

Any expert around who could help decipher this panic report? I already uninstalled the non-Apple kexts now (Intel driver and Virtualbox) to see if that makes a difference. The MacBook crashes about every two-three weeks I estimate.


MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 10.14

Posted on Aug 13, 2020 5:24 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Aug 13, 2020 6:27 AM

fhisg wrote:

Any expert around who could help decipher this panic report? I already uninstalled the non-Apple kexts now (Intel driver and Virtualbox) to see if that makes a difference. The MacBook crashes about every two-three weeks I estimate.
<panic report.log>


? what are you saying you removed

<org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxNetAdp 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxNetFlt 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxUSB 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxDrv 6.1.8

com.intel.driver.EnergyDriver >


and you are still having the KP?




Kernel Panics are predominately caused by hardware faults or faulty third-party kernel extensions.




If your Mac spontaneously restarts or displays a ... - Apple Support

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT200553


You can post your Kernel Panic report in their entirety here, preferable three separate reports in three separate "Additional Text" box for ease of reading and comparison, (see menu below.) A single report may be useful but does not establish a trend for a meaningful diagnosis.


Kernel Panic reports can be found /Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports

From the Finder>Go>Go To Folder, copy and paste:

/Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports


ends in .panic post the whole report.


4 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Aug 13, 2020 6:27 AM in response to fhisg

fhisg wrote:

Any expert around who could help decipher this panic report? I already uninstalled the non-Apple kexts now (Intel driver and Virtualbox) to see if that makes a difference. The MacBook crashes about every two-three weeks I estimate.
<panic report.log>


? what are you saying you removed

<org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxNetAdp 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxNetFlt 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxUSB 6.1.8

org.virtualbox.kext.VBoxDrv 6.1.8

com.intel.driver.EnergyDriver >


and you are still having the KP?




Kernel Panics are predominately caused by hardware faults or faulty third-party kernel extensions.




If your Mac spontaneously restarts or displays a ... - Apple Support

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT200553


You can post your Kernel Panic report in their entirety here, preferable three separate reports in three separate "Additional Text" box for ease of reading and comparison, (see menu below.) A single report may be useful but does not establish a trend for a meaningful diagnosis.


Kernel Panic reports can be found /Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports

From the Finder>Go>Go To Folder, copy and paste:

/Library/Logs/DiagnosticReports


ends in .panic post the whole report.


Aug 13, 2020 6:35 AM in response to leroydouglas

Kernel Panics are predominately caused by hardware faults or faulty third-party kernel extensions.

I learned about this before I created the post. Hence, I now removed the kexts you listed but this happened after the recent panic. So, it's wait-and-see now.


I'll add more reports if it happens again. I thought someone with experience might be able to derive from my report if I happen to run faulty hardware. This is on a MacBook Pro 13-Inch "Core i7" 3.0 Mid-2014 with unmodified hardware (RAM or otherwise).

Decipher panic report

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