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Helpful answers
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Oct 28, 2013 11:13 PM in response to WarrenOby macfanta,I discovered one interesting thing now...
Open Finder and look the memory usage growing more and more when you view files as Cover Flow.
Open Application folder on Cover Flow...my Memory usage is +150MB now
I closed Finder window but the memory usage don't fall
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Oct 29, 2013 5:59 AM in response to alvarofrommby SVSIndia,Hi,
Like others, I too quickly installed Mavericks over Mountain Lion. I also faced high memory usage by kernel_task (over 600MB) and com.apple.IconServicesAgent (over 150MB).
In my case, I noticed that I had installed Tinkertool which had started a kernel task com.bresink.driver.BRESINKx86Monitoring. As per advise of others, I unloaded it using kextunload command and removed it from Library/StartupItems
I also went to system preferences and in users and groups, I unchecked ItunesHelper from autoload.
I shutdown the system and restarted it. Now, my Kernel task is using 490 MB and com.apple.iconservicesagent only 30MB. Screenshot attached. As you can see I am running activity monitor, google chrome, safari and mail.
Perhaps your systems may be running some kernel tasks do kextstat | grep -v apple to check. I also suggest you to uncheck some start up items from Users &Groups in System preferences and see if you have luck.
Thanks
S V Sudharshan
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Oct 29, 2013 6:26 AM in response to SVSIndiaby HPM2012,Having the same problem with growing size of com.apple.IconServicesAgen. Also Console is repeating this message over and over again:
10/29/13 9:19:29.572 AM com.apple.IconServicesAgent[231]: Icon filename entry missing from bundle info dictionary for bundle at URL: file:///System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/WebKit2.framework/Versions/A/XPCServic es/com.apple.WebKit.WebContent.xpc/
Is there anything I can do to fix this?
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Oct 29, 2013 6:35 AM in response to alvarofrommby phaistonian,- Reboot
- Keep pressing ⌘+R (recover mode)
- Disk Utility
- Repair Disk Permissions
This did the trick for me.
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Oct 29, 2013 11:47 AM in response to phaistonianby Kocab,Thanks Phaistonian - this fixed it for me too.
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Oct 29, 2013 3:45 PM in response to phaistonianby HPM2012,The Phaistonian fix stopped my Console error messages, but com.apple.IconServicesAgent is still running, currently using
116.3 MB of memory. Doesnt seem to ever stop running.
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Oct 29, 2013 8:50 PM in response to alvarofrommby MattoMad,Hi sorry for my English, I have the same problem! i change The default browser to Google Chrome and the prosses down to 0.5 % CPU!!
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Oct 30, 2013 5:52 AM in response to alvarofrommby SVSIndia,I noticed that iconServicesAgent begins to consume more memory when you open finder and navigate to many folders. As a trial, open up activity monitor and then finder and keep navigating to many folders one by one while watching how the memory consumption increases... at least in my case that is what is happening. If others too experience the same, at least we can know something.
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Oct 31, 2013 7:47 AM in response to HPM2012by HPM2012,My Console error messages are back and iconServicesAgent is 149 MB.
10/31/13 10:42:48.526 AM com.apple.IconServicesAgent[228]: Icon filename entry missing from bundle info dictionary for bundle at URL: file:///System/Library/PrivateFrameworks/WebKit2.framework/Versions/A/XPCServic es/com.apple.WebKit.WebContent.xpc/
So nothing seems fixed here and issues persist.
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Oct 31, 2013 10:26 AM in response to alvarofrommby northwest291,I had this problem too, and when trying to repair disc permissions, I got all these ACL-errors. When searching for a solution for that problem, I found something called ACLr8 on the web. Downloaded it and ran it.
My com.apple.iconservicesagent process is now using 12.4 MB of RAM, instead of over 200 MB of RAM.
I do not know if this can help you, and I want to make clear that using that little commandline is on your own risk!
For me, it helped though
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Oct 31, 2013 11:12 AM in response to northwest291by HPM2012,Running permission repair on my system results in a couple of printer permission changes and nothing else, so I would be reluctant to run an ACL command line fix in Terminal.
I had killed iconServicesAgent a few hours ago, but it is back running and growing and up to 92.5 MB now.
TIA.
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Nov 1, 2013 6:16 AM in response to alvarofrommby nsantilli,Somewhere in the thread it was recommended to boot into Recovery mode (boot and hold CMD-R) and run disk utilities to repair permissions. This seems help!
As some have mentioned, only a couple of things needed repairing (some print services for me) and then nothing else. Still, the iconServicesAgent continued to take about 150mb RAM. I repeated the recovery mode repair permissions 2 or 3 times. Now iconServicesAgent only takes 3mb RAM.
I've also noticed that the Kernel Task that was taking upward of 700mb RAB, is consistently down below 500mb RAM. Still far too high, but at least it's better...
try repairing permissions and restarting a few times and hopefully it helps flush whatever is caushing issues.
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Nov 1, 2013 9:25 AM in response to nsantilliby WarrenO,Disk repair is always a good thing to do regularly in any case - once a month or so jsut to confirm things are working correctly. However, running a permission repair several times in a row won't accomplish anything. Once is sufficient.
com.apple.IconServicesAgent will settle down after a while, it seems, once it's finished caching all your documents. My surmise is that those who are seeing a substantial reduction in its RAM usage have reached the threshold where it becomes a more polite process., and that it has little to do with repeated disk maintenance operations.
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Nov 1, 2013 9:58 AM in response to WarrenOby nsantilli,I upgraded on release day. the iconServicesAgent has been close to 200mb since install and didn't fall to 1-2mb until after I had executed the process I described. Completely possible that the timing was just coincidental.
I agree, running multiple times shouldn't make a difference. But if it seems to help if I hop on my left foot when it runs, I'll do it.
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Nov 1, 2013 12:04 PM in response to nsantilliby WarrenO,What's funny is that one of my machines settled down after several days - and then lost power to an external HD, which resulted in a dirty unmount. When I fixed the problem, the IconServicesAgent went back to its old tricks. I actually had to reboot on that one; none of the documents on the external drive were recognizable to their parent apps. (PDFs wouldn't load, for instance, with Finder reporting that it couldn't find Acrobat.)
I think there has to be a connection there.
com.apple.IconServicesAgent is clearly doing something, but the CPU load it's using - very low - is vastly out of proportion to its RAM usage, I think. I mean I'd expect a system process taking up that much space - presumably doing some kind of indexing, caching, or databasing a la Spotlight - to be occupying more cycles as well.
