iPhabio

Q: Disk not ejected properly

Hi I'm having this issue since I upgraded to Mavericks where almost every time I put my computers to sleep I get the "Disk not ejected propoerly" message and every disk but the system one is not mounted and cannot be found by Disk Utility.

 

I have a Mac Mini late 2009 and a Macbook Pro 15 mid 2009 and I'm having this issue in both machines. Never had any issues before in any of my machines, not in Leopard, Snow Leopard or Lion.

 

On my Mini I have two external USB drives and on my MBP I have a SSD, where the system is installed, and a HD (I replaced my optical drive with a bay to install the extra disk).

 

I researched the issue and found a couple of threads where people sugested to buy a 3rd party app that would unmount the disks at sleep and remount them at wake, but I think this shouldn't be a issue, since it never happened with any version of OSX I had used before.

 

Is anybody else having this issue as well? Is there any word from Apple on this subject? Can I hope for a fix?

 

Thanks

MacBook Pro, OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Oct 28, 2013 9:55 AM

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Q: Disk not ejected properly

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  • by bebopagogo,

    bebopagogo bebopagogo Apr 18, 2014 4:55 PM in response to iPhabio
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Apr 18, 2014 4:55 PM in response to iPhabio

    I'm having this issue on two different Macs; a 2013 Mac Pro running Mavericks and a 2013 MacBook Air running Mountain Lion.  On the Macbook Air it's happening with an OWC SSD in a Sonnet Thunderbolt expansion chassis.  On the Mac Pro, I have the same type of Sonnet chassis with the same type of OWC SSD and have had the same issue with that.  In order to keep operating, I tried using my USB 3 "MiniPro" SSD and had the same issue with it even while just restoring my data from a Time Machine backup on the network.  I have all the usual "don't sleep" system settings in place and the machine is accessible 24/7, but these added drives keep getting "improperly ejected" by themselves to the point of being corrupted so I can't write to them and even had mounting issues and unsuccessful initial attempts at reformatting after this happened.  I'm actually sending the OWC drives back to them to be checked out, but after seeing all the stuff on this thread, it seems to be some sort of MacOS issue. 

     

    I have a Mac Mini running OSX Server  (Mountain Lion) and had the USB3 MiniPro SSD on it (and it has another external Thunderbolt drive) and _never_ have had any issue with it.  Note that OSX Server apparently never spins disks down (I had looked into that thinking that allowing the external RAID that I use for backups might have a prolonged life if it could spin down) so I'm thinking this issue is very likely some energy saving measure related to spinning disks down that's not working correctly.   I haven't yet tried "caffinate" or some of the other suggestions here (I did try Robin's solution to no avail on the Mac Pro) that may work to keep the "disk sleep" issue or whatever it is come into play.  I may try that until there's a fix from Apple.

  • by Podstar,

    Podstar Podstar Apr 18, 2014 9:11 PM in response to iPhabio
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Apr 18, 2014 9:11 PM in response to iPhabio

    Well I have had my Buffalo 1tb Thunderbolt drive now hooked to my iMac as my Time Machine backup.

    And so far NO disk not ejected messages!  I have done nothing to my settings as far as power or any other

    configuration item.  So I think the whole problem is in the USB3 programming that Apple uses.  I have put the

    computer to sleep lots of times and shut it down without any problems.  So Apple must have the Thunderbolt

    programming in pretty good shape for most drives.  Hopefully they will fix it for USB3 too.

     

    John

  • by mmanna1,

    mmanna1 mmanna1 Apr 23, 2014 3:18 PM in response to cjjunior
    Level 1 (4 points)
    iCloud
    Apr 23, 2014 3:18 PM in response to cjjunior

    I am new to Apple buying an iMac in Feb 2014.  I am using a USB connected SeaGate Maxtor OneTouch 4 for the Time Machine.  I had no problem until OS X updated to 10.9.2.  After that I started getting the DNEP message.  I implemented the "Spotlight" and the "do not put the hard drive to sleep" methods mentioned in the thread and for the last 3 days, no issues.  Fingers crossed.

  • by ataynay,

    ataynay ataynay Apr 30, 2014 7:52 PM in response to Robster50
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Apr 30, 2014 7:52 PM in response to Robster50

    I have spent literally hours on the phone with Apple support, I've gone through six different senior specialists, and nothing they've suggested has worked.  I've been on with iTunes specialists, iPod specialists, software, hardware, the whole thing.  Nobody has any idea what the **** is going on.  I have Jettison but it only works if it can detect a drive to eject.

  • by genius_foo,

    genius_foo genius_foo Apr 30, 2014 10:30 PM in response to ataynay
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Apr 30, 2014 10:30 PM in response to ataynay

    @ataynay:  have you tried running caffeinate in Terminal?  (you have to keep it running, forever).

  • by ataynay,

    ataynay ataynay May 1, 2014 8:19 AM in response to genius_foo
    Level 1 (0 points)
    May 1, 2014 8:19 AM in response to genius_foo

    Caffeinate will not address the problem, nothing is going to sleep or waking up.  My hard drive is awake when I open my laptop from sleep.  This is only happening with the iPod when I plug it in.

  • by baguak,

    baguak baguak May 2, 2014 10:01 AM in response to iPhabio
    Level 1 (0 points)
    May 2, 2014 10:01 AM in response to iPhabio

    At 12 thousand hits it is about time to figure this out. This is maddening. It is not just mavericks either. I have USB portable drives and they randomly eject. Nothing in this entire thread has helped. It is a software bug that needs to be addressed. For the love of god Apple fix this!

  • by mmanna1,

    mmanna1 mmanna1 May 2, 2014 12:05 PM in response to baguak
    Level 1 (4 points)
    iCloud
    May 2, 2014 12:05 PM in response to baguak

    The Spotlight and "Do not put the drive to sleep" method did not last.  Today, my external drive started ejecting again by itself.  I have not contacted Apple because based on all of your posts, it would be fruitless to spend the time.  Is is possible to send them a raft of e-mails?

  • by ataynay,

    ataynay ataynay May 2, 2014 6:31 PM in response to baguak
    Level 1 (0 points)
    May 2, 2014 6:31 PM in response to baguak

    They had me partition the drive, install the OS on the new drive.  That didn't work, in fact, it's even worse on the test drive.  I'm being kicked up to Engineering.

  • by kahjot,

    kahjot kahjot May 2, 2014 9:07 PM in response to ataynay
    Level 4 (1,416 points)
    Desktops
    May 2, 2014 9:07 PM in response to ataynay

    The "disk ejected improperly" problem when waking from sleep started with Mountain Lion on my Mac Pro. It affects USB3 Seagate Backup Desktop drives connected to a CalDigit USB 3/eSATA card. The same problem occurs in Mavericks. It must be software rather than hardware, because the problem does not exist in Snow Leopard. Fortunately, I use Snow Leopard 95% of the time, for many reasons, not just because of this annoying glitch.

  • by houstonwehaveaproblem2014,

    houstonwehaveaproblem2014 houstonwehaveaproblem2014 May 3, 2014 8:58 PM in response to kahjot
    Level 1 (0 points)
    May 3, 2014 8:58 PM in response to kahjot

    That's helpful info, although I think external HDDs other than seagate are affected.  (I'm assuming you're running different OSs on the same machine and getting  ejected (or not) according to which OS your USB3 HDD is plugged into?)     

    And for what it's worth, Apple are aware of this thread (so mind your language everyone!) and last week I heard the "u" word mentioned during a call-back regarding my long-running case. Fingers crossed.

  • by kahjot,

    kahjot kahjot May 3, 2014 10:25 PM in response to houstonwehaveaproblem2014
    Level 4 (1,416 points)
    Desktops
    May 3, 2014 10:25 PM in response to houstonwehaveaproblem2014

    houstonwehaveaproblem2014 wrote:

     

    That's helpful info, although I think external HDDs other than seagate are affected.  (I'm assuming you're running different OSs on the same machine and getting  ejected (or not) according to which OS your USB3 HDD is plugged into?)     

    And for what it's worth, Apple are aware of this thread (so mind your language everyone!) and last week I heard the "u" word mentioned during a call-back regarding my long-running case. Fingers crossed.

     

    I would assume that other drives are affected. The Seagates just happen to be the only USB 3 drives I have at the moment. You are correct that there are several operating systems installed on my Mac Pro (Snow Leopard, Mountain Lion, and Mavericks) and that these particular drives are improperly ejected in Mountain Lion (and Mavericks) but not in Snow Leopard. I just booted into Mountain Lion to verify that the USB 3 drive gets ejected improperly but not the FW drive, and this does seem to be the case. I have an OWC enclosure (FW800, USB3, eSATA) on the way, and I will be interested in seeing whether it does any better with USB 3 than the Seagates. Before then, I want to do a bit of testing to see if there is an ejection issue with drives attached to the eSATA ports on the CalDigit card.

  • by kahjot,

    kahjot kahjot May 5, 2014 9:32 AM in response to kahjot
    Level 4 (1,416 points)
    Desktops
    May 5, 2014 9:32 AM in response to kahjot

    Following up: I just ran a quick  test, hooking up a drive in a quad-interface OWC enclosure to eSATA on the CalDigit combo USB3/eSATA card. This drive is not improperly ejected when the computer sleeps. It's possible that there is an issue with the CalDigit driver for Mountain Lion, but no issue with their Snow Leopard driver; but I am inclined to suspect that it's an OS problem, since most people reporting the improper ejection error don't have my system configuration.

  • by ministryotech,

    ministryotech ministryotech May 7, 2014 6:45 AM in response to kahjot
    Level 1 (0 points)
    May 7, 2014 6:45 AM in response to kahjot

    I'm having the same problem with a pair of drives in a USB connected dual caddy (USB3 compatible).

     

    I'm on my second caddy after initially think the caddy was broken. Both are slightly different. I have tried USB 3 and USB 2 cables and experience the same problem on both. It's not power related as I can be looking at the screen and it'll just decide to drop off. I've set all my power settings to never sleep regardless. These are all connected to a Mac Mini which I ue as my file server.

     

    This all started for me after the 9.0.2 upgrade for Mavericks.

     

    I also have an attached Thunderbolt drive and a second USB 3 drive that I use for offsite backups, neither of which seem to have a problem.

     

    I am utterly fuming about this now. I've spent £60 on a new caddy and I've already lost 1 3TB seagate HDD which is now totally dead due to this problem.

     

    I'm trying running the caddy off my time capsule as a last resort. Failing that I think I'll just buy a Synology NAS instead and dedicate it to my time machine backups. They seem to be a fair bit more reliable than my newer Apple kit.

  • by kahjot,

    kahjot kahjot May 7, 2014 7:10 AM in response to ministryotech
    Level 4 (1,416 points)
    Desktops
    May 7, 2014 7:10 AM in response to ministryotech

    I'm not sure what you mean by "caddy". Could you clarify?

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