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Solution: Mountain Lion slow shut down

Hello Community,


I just found something to fix the slow shut down problem temporarily!

Just use the following Terminal codes and hit enter after each line!


cd ~/Library/Preferences/

rm com.apple.desktop.plist

killall dock


You will have to set your wallpaper again!

After this your shut down time (if it was very long) should be shorter like when your Mac was new!


I had the problem on my MacBook Pro 15 RD! Maybe it is only a specific problem to this computer! I just wanted to share my solution cause i found some similar descriptions to problems in some other forums!

MacBook Pro (Retina, Mid 2012), OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.2)

Posted on Nov 17, 2012 3:48 AM

Reply
42 replies

Nov 18, 2012 8:24 AM in response to Don Barron

thats quite strange! As far as I know, the Dock process is part of Mac OS (or 10.7+ only??)... I don't know what you did but you may try to restart your computer and try the commands again! Which Mac do you use and which version of Mac OS are you running on it? (Probably won't help me to get a solution for you, but it would be interesting!)

Feb 10, 2013 8:19 AM in response to Free 4 Live

The solution in the original post


rm ~/Library/Preferences/com.apple.desktop.plist

killall Dock


worked perfectly for me. Shutdown time had gone to 25 seconds after the upgrade to Mountain Lion (OSX 10.8), and after this little procedure it is back where it belongs: 1 second. Thanks for saving me from that daily annoyance, Free 4 Live!

Feb 10, 2013 8:54 AM in response to Free 4 Live

And, another reason not to use a terminal command for that: there is a certain sequence the OS goes through while doing a proper shutdown; you shorten or bypass that, you're going to bork your system sooner or later. Quitting applications, closing windows, not having any items in login or cluttering up your desktop, etc. before shutdown is far more effective in speeding up both the shutdown and bootup times.

Feb 10, 2013 9:09 AM in response to Barry Hemphill

Barry Hemphill wrote:


This is a bad idea. Using terminal commands for this (or practically anything else) is dangerous UNLESS you are completely comfortable with the arcane UNIX-like commands.


P.S. Who in the world cares how long it takes to have a system do a normal shutdown?

Barry, having to wait for shutdown when you're ready to pack up your laptop is an annoyance. A minor one, admittedly, but still an annoyance. Particularly if you have a brand new computer and you know it is capable of immediate shutdown.


I do hope that those who are uncomfortable with Terminal will be cautious and make sure to use Copy and Paste to get the commands exactly right.


babowa wrote:


there is a certain sequence the OS goes through while doing a proper shutdown; you shorten or bypass that, you're going to bork your system sooner or later. Quitting applications, closing windows, not having any items in login or cluttering up your desktop, etc. before shutdown is far more effective in speeding up both the shutdown

babowa, this fix doesn't interfere with the shutdown sequence itself. It just cleans up a file that apparently sits in the way of normal shutdown. The other things you list are not "far more effective in speeding up shutdown", as they don't work to fix this problem whereas the simple file deletion does work.

Feb 10, 2013 11:39 AM in response to babowa

Exactly, it's a free world: you may hold on to your corrupted files, and I may delete mine and have the shutdown speed the system is capable of.


By the way, I'm fine with a 25 second wait if it is necessary. But not if it's due to a problem that can easily be fixed (not with a 'hack' but simply by deleting one file that is immediately recreated by the system).

Mar 22, 2013 3:48 AM in response to babowa

Just a small heads-up - we have a load of thunderstorms in my part of the world and when I need to shut down my iMac and disconnect it I don't have 25 seconds, I may already have run out of time. There are more setups and users than your own narrow world, don't please tell others what they should or should not do. Try and learn from the experiences of others, empathise with world views other than your own. Quite apart from the need to shut down when there is a thunderstorm overhead, I am sick of sitting around waiting for my iMac to shutdown every night before I can switch off the UPS it is connected to. I haven't yet tried removing the plist but if it works I'll probably include it in my shutdown script. Oh, and before you start flaming me, I have used Macs since before they were released to the general public, and have been an Apple Certified Developer for longer than that.

Mar 23, 2013 12:38 AM in response to xxMikeBxx

xxMikeBxx wrote:


The fix for me was to close all running applications then tick the box to re-open windows when logging back in (I had it un-ticked before).


The shut down went from >20 seconds to about 1 second! (I have an SSD installed in my iMac.)


Now whether this stays fixed is another matter!

Just figured out how to quote people in a reply. Anyway, again, this worked for me.

Solution: Mountain Lion slow shut down

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