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after encrypting with filevault 2 on mountain lion, safari is extremely slow

after encrypting with filevault2 on mountain lion, safari is running extremely slow.


it's taking more than 45 seconds (sometimes a full minute) to load pages.


my internet speeds are 35 mbps download and 6.35 mpbs upload, so it's not my internet connection.


i have deleted the cache files and the system preferences.


i'm finding that chrome is faster, but i'm seeing slowness there too.


in encrypted using filevault 2.0 yesterday, all software is up to date.


can anyone please help me with this? i don't want to have to turn off filevault.


thanks!

Mac mini, OS X Mountain Lion, mac mini, 16 GB RAM, 512 SSD

Posted on Aug 3, 2012 7:27 PM

Reply
35 replies

Aug 4, 2012 3:53 PM in response to lbk.lbk

Please read this whole message before doing anything.


This procedure is a diagnostic test. It won’t solve your problem. Don’t be disappointed when you find that nothing has changed after you complete it.


Third-party system modifications are a common cause of usability problems. By a “system modification,” I mean software that affects the operation of other software — potentially for the worse. The following procedure will help identify which such modifications you've installed. Don’t be alarmed by the complexity of these instructions — they’re easy to carry out and won’t change anything on your Mac.


These steps are to be taken while booted in “normal” mode, not in safe mode. If you’re now running in safe mode, reboot as usual before continuing.


Below are instructions to enter some UNIX shell commands. The commands are harmless, but they must be entered exactly as given in order to work. If you have doubts about the safety of the procedure suggested here, search this site for other discussions in which it’s been followed without any report of ill effects.


Some of the commands will line-wrap or scroll in your browser, but each one is really just a single line, all of which must be selected. You can accomplish this easily by triple-clicking anywhere in the line. The whole line will highlight, and you can then either copy or drag it. The headings “Step 1” and so on are not part of the commands.


Note: If you have more than one user account, Step 2 must be taken as an administrator. Ordinarily that would be the user created automatically when you booted the system for the first time. The other steps should be taken as the user who has the problem, if different. Most personal Macs have only one user, and in that case this paragraph doesn’t apply.


Launch the Terminal application in any of the following ways:


☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)


☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.


☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the page that opens.


When you launch Terminal, a text window will open with a line already in it, ending either in a dollar sign (“$”) or a percent sign (“%”). If you get the percent sign, enter “sh” and press return. You should then get a new line ending in a dollar sign.


Step 1


Copy or drag — do not type — the line below into the Terminal window, then press return:


kextstat -kl | awk '!/com\.apple/{printf "%s %s\n", $6, $7}'


Post the lines of output (if any) that appear below what you just entered (the text, please, not a screenshot.) You can omit the final line ending in “$”.


Step 2


Repeat with this line:


sudo launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.(apple|openssh|vix)|edu\.mit|org\.(amavis|apache|cups|isc|ntp|postfix|x)/{print $3}'


This time, you'll be prompted for your login password, which won't be displayed when you type it. You may get a one-time warning not to screw up. You don't need to post the warning.


Note: If you don’t have a login password, you’ll need to set one before taking this step. If that’s not possible, skip to the next step.


Step 3


launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.apple|edu\.mit|org\.(x|openbsd)/{print $3}'


Step 4


ls -1A /e*/mach* {,/}L*/{Ad,Compon,Ex,Fram,In,Keyb,La,Mail/Bu,P*P,Priv,Qu,Scripti,Servi,Spo,Sta}* L*/Fonts 2> /dev/null


Important: If you formerly synchronized with a MobileMe account, your me.com email address may appear in the output of the above command. If so, anonymize it before posting.


Step 5


osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get name of every login item' 2> /dev/null


Remember, steps 1-5 are all drag-and-drop or copy-and-paste, whichever you prefer — no typing, except your password. Also remember to post the output.


You can then quit Terminal.

Aug 4, 2012 4:40 PM in response to Linc Davis

RESULTS:


kextstat -kl | awk '!/com\.apple/{printf "%s %s\n", $6, $7}'


com.sophos.kext.sav (8.0.4)


sudo launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.(apple|openssh|vix)|edu\.mit|org\.(amavis|apache|cups|isc|ntp|postfix|x)/{print $3}'


org.macosforge.xquartz.privileged_startx

com.sophos.notification

com.sophos.intercheck

com.sophos.autoupdate

com.sharpcast.xfsmond

com.jamfsoftware.task.every

com.intego.task.manager.daemon

com.intego.netupdate.daemon

com.intego.commonservices.icalserver

com.intego.commonservices.daemon

com.hidden.daemon

com.google.keystone.daemon

com.crashplan.engine

com.bombich.ccc

com.adobe.fpsaud

lisas-Mac-mini:~ lisa$


launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.apple|edu\.mit|org\.(x|openbsd)/{print $3}'


com.c-command.SpamSieve.LaunchAgent

org.macosforge.xquartz.startx

net.culater.SIMBL.Agent

com.intego.task.manager.notifier

com.google.keystone.system.agent

com.flipvideo.FlipShareAutoRun

ws.agile.1PasswordAgent

de.metaquark.appfresh

com.valvesoftware.steamclean

com.micromat.SMSDaemon

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.volumeWatcher

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.trashSizeWatcher

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.helperTool

com.adobe.ARM.202f4087f2bbde52e3ac2df389f53a4f123223c9cc56a8fd83a6f7ae


ls -1A /e*/mach* {,/}L*/{Ad,Compon,Ex,Fram,In,Keyb,La,Mail/Bu,P*P,Priv,Qu,Scripti,Servi,Spo,Sta}* L*/Fonts 2> /dev/null


/Library/Address Book Plug-Ins:

SkypeABDialer.bundle

SkypeABSMS.bundle



/Library/Components:



/Library/Extensions:

VirtualPCNetworking.kext

VirtualPCOSServices.kext



/Library/Frameworks:

AEProfiling.framework

AERegistration.framework

Adobe AIR.framework

AppleConnect.framework

ApplicationEnhancer.framework

AudioMixEngine.framework

BfWrap.framework

DRS_DPE.framework

DotMacKit.framework

EDWOCommon.framework

EDWOInternet.framework

EWSMac.framework

Format_DPE.framework

FxPlug.framework

HPDeviceModel.framework

HPPml.framework

HPServicesInterface.framework

HPSmartPrint.framework

HPSmartX.framework

IntegoiCalFramework.framework

MindFortress.framework

NetUpdateShared.framework

NotesLib.framework

NyxAudioAnalysis.framework

PMPluginsFramework.framework

PMPluginsFramework4.framework

PMPluginsFramework68kAligned.framework

Pantomime.framework

PluginManager.framework

ProFX.framework

SAVI.framework

SUMScanKit.framework

SyncManagerCommon.framework

SyncManagerMedia.framework

UpekToolbox.framework

VtApi.framework

XSKey.framework

iLifeFaceRecognition.framework

iLifeKit.framework

iLifePageLayout.framework

iLifeSQLAccess.framework

iLifeSlideshow.framework

iTunesLibrary.framework

libical.framework



/Library/Input Methods:



/Library/Intego:

IMailSenderTool

IntegoStatusItem.bundle

IntegoiCalServer

MIME.plist

TaskManager

integod

netbarrierd.bundle

netupdated.bundle



/Library/Internet Plug-Ins:

AdobePDFViewer.plugin

AppleConnect.plugin

DirectorShockwave.plugin

Flash Player.plugin

JavaAppletPlugin.plugin

Quartz Composer.webplugin

QuickTime Plugin.plugin

Silverlight.plugin

Unused

flashplayer.xpt

iPhotoPhotocast.plugin

nsIQTScriptablePlugin.xpt



/Library/Keyboard Layouts:



/Library/LaunchAgents:

com.apple.ist.ds.appleconnect.AppleConnectAgent.plist

com.flipvideo.FlipShare.AutoRun.plist

com.google.keystone.agent.plist

com.intego.task.manager.notifier.plist

org.macosforge.xquartz.startx.plist



/Library/LaunchDaemons:

com.adobe.fpsaud.plist

com.apple.aelwriter.plist

com.apple.ist.ds.appleconnect.plist

com.atomicbird.macaroni.launchd.plist

com.bombich.ccc.plist

com.crashplan.engine.plist

com.google.keystone.daemon.plist

com.hidden.daemon.plist

com.intego.commonservices.daemon.plist

com.intego.commonservices.icalserver.plist

com.intego.netupdate.daemon.plist

com.intego.task.manager.daemon.plist

com.jamfsoftware.startupItem.plist

com.jamfsoftware.task.1.plist

com.sharpcast.xfsmond.plist

com.sophos.autoupdate.plist

com.sophos.intercheck.plist

com.sophos.notification.plist

org.macosforge.xquartz.privileged_startx.plist



/Library/PreferencePanes:

3ivxPrefPane.prefPane

Application Enhancer.prefPane

Flash Player.prefPane

Macaroni.prefPane

MouseZoom.prefPane

NetUpdate.prefPane

Secrets.prefPane



/Library/PrivilegedHelperTools:

NetUpdateAgent.app

com.apple.ist.ds.appleconnect

com.bombich.ccc



/Library/QuickLook:

GBQLGenerator.qlgenerator

iBooksAuthor.qlgenerator

iWork.qlgenerator



/Library/QuickTime:

AppleIntermediateCodec.component

AppleMPEG2Codec.component



/Library/ScriptingAdditions:



/Library/Services:

TextExpander.service



/Library/Spotlight:

GBSpotlightImporter.mdimporter

LogicPro.mdimporter

Microsoft Entourage.mdimporter

Microsoft Office.mdimporter

iBooksAuthor.mdimporter

iWeb.mdimporter

iWork.mdimporter



/Library/StartupItems:

HP IO

HP Trap Monitor

IntegoCommon

MxBtDaemon

NetBarrier

VirtualPCOSServices



/etc/mach_init.d:



/etc/mach_init_per_login_session.d:



/etc/mach_init_per_user.d:



Library/Address Book Plug-Ins:

AdiumAddressBookAction_AIM.scpt

AdiumAddressBookAction_ICQ.scpt

AdiumAddressBookAction_Jabber.scpt

AdiumAddressBookAction_MSN.scpt

AdiumAddressBookAction_SMS.scpt

AdiumAddressBookAction_Yahoo.scpt



Library/Fonts:

28 Days Later.ttf

Abadi MT Condensed Extra Bold

Abadi MT Condensed Light

Andale Mono

Arial

Arial Black

Arial Narrow

Arial Rounded Bold

Baskerville Old Face

Batang.ttf

Bauhaus 93

Bell MT

Bernard MT Condensed

Book Antiqua

Bookman Old Style

Braggadocio

Britannic Bold

Brush Script

Calisto MT

Century

Century Gothic

Century Schoolbook

Colonna

Comic Sans MS

Cooper Black

Copperplate Gothic Bold

Copperplate Gothic Light

Curlz MT

Desdemona

Edwardian Script ITC

Engravers MT

Eurostile

Footlight Light

Garamond

Georgia

Gill Sans Ultra Bold

Gloucester MT Extra Condensed

Goudy Old Style

Gulim.ttf

Haettenschweiler

Harrington

Impact

Imprint MT Shadow

Kino

Lucida Blackletter

Lucida Bright

Lucida Calligraphy

Lucida Fax

Lucida Handwriting

Lucida Sans

Lucida Sans Typewriter

MS Gothic.ttf

MS Mincho.ttf

MS PGothic.ttf

MS PMincho.ttf

MT Extra

Matura Script Capitals

Mistral

Modern No. 20

Monotype Corsiva

Monotype Sorts

News Gothic MT

Onyx

PMingLiU.ttf

Perpetua Titling MT

Playbill

Rockwell

Rockwell Extra Bold

SimSun.ttf

SketchRockwell-Bold.ttf

Stencil

Tahoma

Times New Roman

Trebuchet MS

Verdana

Wide Latin

Wingdings

Wingdings 2

Wingdings 3

encodings.dir

fonts.dir

fonts.list

fonts.scale



Library/Frameworks:

EWSMac-GC.framework



Library/InputManagers:

Smart Crash Reports



Library/Internet Plug-Ins:

EvernoteSafariClipperPlugin.webplugin

Move_Media_Player.plugin



Library/Keyboard Layouts:



Library/LaunchAgents:

com.adobe.ARM.202f4087f2bbde52e3ac2df389f53a4f123223c9cc56a8fd83a6f7ae.plist

com.apple.AddressBook.ScheduledSync.PHXCardDAVSource.5C5D084C-4A95-4A5D-84EF-F04 513398D71.plist

com.apple.AddressBook.ScheduledSync.PHXCardDAVSource.A2C969DE-59DC-4531-B4CB-65A DBA9693E4.plist

com.apple.ISTSoftwareUpdate.plist

com.apple.SafariBookmarksSyncer.plist

com.c-command.SpamSieve.LaunchAgent.plist

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.helperTool.plist

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.trashSizeWatcher.plist

com.macpaw.CleanMyMac.volumeWatcher.plist

com.micromat.SMSDaemon.plist

com.valvesoftware.steamclean.plist

de.metaquark.appfresh.plist

ws.agile.1PasswordAgent.plist



Library/Mail/Bundles:

SpamSieve.mailbundle



Library/Mail/Bundles (Disabled):



Library/PreferencePanes:

Hazel.prefPane

IS&T Software Update.prefPane

MusicManager.prefPane



Library/ScriptingAdditions:

TextExpander Addition.osax



Library/Services:

Apple Directory Services.service

CourierServices.service

GraphicConverter.service



osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get name of every login item' 2> /dev/null


Cobook, MenuPop, Overflow, AirPort Base Station Agent, Show Desktop, TextExpander, HazelHelper, Alfred, SugarSync Manager, CrashPlan menu bar, Dropbox

Aug 4, 2012 5:21 PM in response to lbk.lbk

Please read this whole message carefully, especially the warnings, before doing anything.

1. The changes to your configuration suggested here should be considered provisional; they may not solve your problem, or they may remove functionality that you find useful. If a third-party system modification that you want to keep is causing the problem, seek help from its developer.

2. WARNING: Back up all data now if you haven’t already done so. Before proceeding, you must be sure you can restore your system to its present state, even if it becomes unbootable. If you’re not sure you can do that, STOP — DON’T CHANGE ANYTHING. If you’re dissatisfied with the results of the procedure suggested below, restore from your backup. I will not be responsible for the consequences, and I will not be able to help, if you ignore this warning.

3. You should either remove or update the following system modification(s), if an update is available from the developer:

N/A

and definitely remove at least the following:


1Password

† 3ivx

† All Intego products

† All Micromat products

† Application Enhancer

† CleanMyMac

† Duplicate fonts in home folder

Evernote SafariClipper plugin

FlipShare

† Macaroni

Move Media Player plugin

† SIMBL

† Sophos

SpamSieve

† TextExpander

† VirtualPC (non-functional partial installation)

4. Whatever you remove must be removed completely, and (unless otherwise specified in this message) the only way to do that is to use the uninstallation tool, if any, provided by the third-party developers, or to follow their instructions. In some cases it may be necessary to re-download or even reinstall the software in order to get rid of it. I can't be more specific, because I don't install such things myself. Please do your own research.

Here are some general guidelines to get you started. Suppose you want to remove something called “BrickYourMac.” First, consult the product's Help menu, if there is one, for instructions. Finding none there, look on the developer's website, say www.brickyourmac.com. (That may not be the actual name of the site; if necessary, search the web for the product name.) If you don’t find anything on the website or in your search, email the developer. While you're waiting for a response, download BrickYourMac.dmg and open it. There may be an application in there such as “Uninstall BrickYourMac.” If not, open “BrickYourMac.pkg” and look for an Uninstall button.

Again, please don't ask me to do this research for you. You can do it better than I can, because I haven't installed the product and I may not even know what it is.

If you can’t remove software in any other way, you’ll have to erase your boot volume and perform a clean reinstallation of OS X. Never install any third-party software unless you're sure you know how to uninstall it; otherwise you may create problems that are very hard to solve.

WARNING: Trying to remove complex system modifications by hunting for files by name often will not work and maymake the problem worse. The same goes for "utilities" that purport to remove software.

5. I recommend that you never reinstall the modifications marked with a dagger (†) above, if any. If your problem is resolved after uninstalling all the above modifications and rebooting, but you still want to use some of those not marked with a dagger, you can experiment with putting them back, one at a time, testing carefully after each step. Keep in mind that system modifications may be incompatible with each other or with future OS X updates, so it may not be clear which one is at fault.

6. If you still have problems after making the suggested changes and rebooting, post again. Remember: if you don’t like the results of this procedure, you can undo it by restoring from the last backup you made before you started.

Uninstall SIMBL as follows.

Select Go Go to Folder… from the Finder menu bar, then enter the following text in the box that opens:

/Library

A folder will open. From that folder, delete the items listed below (some may be absent.) You may be prompted for your administrator login password.

Application Support/SIMBL

InputManagers/SIMBL.bundle

LaunchAgents/net.culater.SIMBL.Agent.plist
ScriptingAdditions/SIMBL.osax

Log out and log back in.


Make sure you never reinstall SIMBL. It’s likely to come bundled with another third-party system modfication that depends on it. If you want trouble-free computing, avoid software that makes miraculous changes to other software, especially built-in applications. The only real exception to that rule is Safari extensions, which are mostly safe, and are easy to get rid of when they don’t work. SIMBL and its dependents are not Safari extensions.

How to maintain a Mac


1. Make redundant backups, keeping at least one off site at all times. One backup is not enough. Don’t back up your backups; make them independent of each other. Don’t rely completely on any single backup method, such as Time Machine.


2. Keep your software up to date. Software Update can be set to notify you automatically of updates to OS X. Some third-party applications have a similar feature, if you don’t mind letting them phone home. Otherwise you have to check yourself on a regular basis.


3. Don't install crapware, such as “themes,” "haxies," “add-ons,” “toolbars,” “enhancers," “optimizers,” “accelerators,” “extenders,” “cleaners,” “defragmenters,” “firewalls,” "barriers," “guardians,” “defenders,” “protectors,” most “plugins,” commercial "virus scanners,” or "utilities." With very few exceptions, this kind of material is useless, or worse than useless.


The more actively promoted the product, the more likely it is to be garbage. The most extreme example is the “MacKeeper” scam.


The only software you should install is that which directly enables you to do the things you use a computer for — such as creating, communicating, and playing — and does not modify the way other software works. Never install any third-party software unless you know how to uninstall it.


The free anti-malware application ClamXav is not crap, and although it’s not routinely needed, it may be useful in some environments, such as a mixed Mac-Windows enterprise network.


4. Beware of trojans. A trojan is malicious software (“malware”) that the user is duped into installing voluntarily. Such attacks were rare on the Mac platform until recently, but are now increasingly common, and increasingly dangerous.


There is some built-in protection against downloading malware, but you can’t rely on it — the attackers are always at least one day ahead of the defense. You can’t rely on third-party protection either. What you can rely on is common-sense awareness — not paranoia, which only makes you more vulnerable.


Never install software from an untrustworthy or unknown source. If in doubt, do some research. Any website that prompts you to install a “codec” or “plugin” that comes from the same site, or an unknown site, is untrustworthy. Software with a known corporate brand, such as Adobe Flash, must be acquired directly from the developer. No intermediary is acceptable, and don’t trust links unless you know how to parse them. Any file that is automatically downloaded from a web page without your having requested it should go straight into the Trash. A website that claims you have a “virus,” or that anything else is wrong with your computer, is rogue.


Because of recurring security issues in Java, it’s best to disable it in your web browsers, if it’s installed. Few websites have Java content nowadays, so you won’t be missing much. This action is mandatory if you’re running any version of OS X older than 10.6.8 with the latest Java update. Note: Java has nothing to do with JavaScript, despite the similar names.


5. Relax, don’t do it. Besides the above, no routine maintenance is necessary or beneficial for the vast majority of users; specifically not “cleaning caches,” “zapping the PRAM,” “rebuilding the directory,” “running periodic scripts,” “deleting log files,” “scanning for viruses,” or “repairing permissions.” Such measures are for solving problems as they arise, not for maintenance.


The very height of futility is running an expensive third-party application called “Disk Warrior” when nothing is wrong, or even when something is wrong and you have backups, which you must have. Don’t waste money on Disk Warrior or anything like it.


Aug 4, 2012 5:54 PM in response to lbk.lbk

i don't have SIMBL installed, i removed it a while ago.


No, you did not.


i'm not removing the following, the are used and needed


As I wrote above, you can reinstall the modifications once you have a clean system to test. I can see how you might have a use for TextExpander. CleanMyMac is worthless, and nobody needs it. In any case, I have no other suggestions. Good luck.

Aug 4, 2012 6:09 PM in response to Linc Davis

i AM cooperating. i'm doing everything you're suggesting. you don't have to get all parental on me. i use cleanmymac, i understand you think it's crap, but it's definitely not what is causing the safari slowness.


i also DID uninstall SIMBL, if you can tell me where you see remnants of it, i'll get rid of them.


if you don't want to continue helping me, then don't, but don't be a jerk about it. seriously...


i need the help, i'm asking for help. i'm doing what you are asking me to do. the issue persists. so far, we haven't resolved anything.


we know it is user specific. all those apps are system wide....


what is the next step?

Aug 4, 2012 6:16 PM in response to lbk.lbk

I posted instructions for removing SIMBL. If you follow them, it will be removed.


The effect of a system-wide installation depends in part on user-level settings.


I don't have a computer lab and staff with which to test every possible combination of system modifications. The only way I, or you, can have an idea of what's going on is to return the system to a nearly clean state, corresponding to what I use myself. I've used this procedure hundreds, maybe thousands of times on this site, and in almost all cases where the user cooperates, the problem gets solved. It does take some effort on your part as well as mine.

after encrypting with filevault 2 on mountain lion, safari is extremely slow

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