Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

What is com.apple.MediaLibraryService?

I just upgraded to Mavericks and iTunes 11.1.2. A few other quick notes on my setup:


  • I wirelessly sync to my iPhone 4S running iOS7.
  • My iTunes and iPhoto libraries are located on a remote disk that I am connected to wirelessly. My router is a Time Capsule with a Lacie HD hooked up to it. The Lacie is where the iTunes and iPhoto LIbraries are located.


First, everything seems to work fine. There is one thing that I noticed though, when I am listening to iTunes internet radio (WXPN or Radio Paradise), I notice that this app (com.apple.MediaLIbraryService) keeps running in the background. It is a drain on the CPU and battery and I notice that my Lacie HD is always spinning. Before the upgrade, the drive would sleep, even while I was listening to internet radio on iTunes because I was not accessing any files.


The app does disappear when I shut down iTunes.


What is the app doing and how can I stop it from being a CPU and battery drain, along with stop spinning up the Lacie HD?


Thanks in advance!


John Mc

MacBook Air (11-inch Mid 2011), OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Nov 2, 2013 7:32 AM

Reply
Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Nov 8, 2013 6:24 AM

Just bumping this back up. I haven't found any info and hoping someone else has.



Again, thanks in advance!


John Mc

73 replies

Nov 30, 2013 12:28 PM in response to John McDonough

Hello!

I have same situation - iPhoto library is on the network drive and com.apple.MediaLibraryService drains battery/cpu. If I close iTunes - everything is OK.

So, what is the solution?


I tried to add iPhoto network folder as exclusion for spotlight, but nothing changed. Also killing the com.apple.MediaLibraryService does not help - it automatically starts..


Thanks in advance!

Dec 6, 2013 5:14 PM in response to John McDonough

I have been working this issue for the past couple of months - since updating to Mavericks. Both my iTunes and iPhoto libraries reside on my NAS (accessed via ethernet). Up until the Mavericks update, my iTunes was left running on my Mac mini server 24/7 with NO issues.


I can confirm that I see two issues:


1. iTunes is using excessive memory (over 2GB); it starts off fine when the mini is rebooted, but then gradually eats through all available RAM until the mini freezes/iTunes crashes.


2. The process "com.apple.MediaLibraryService" appears as 3rd highest memory hog


Stumbled across John's thread here and did some more digging based njakobsen's reply above: I have iTunes Home Sharing enabled in iTunes. Looking at the File | Home Sharing | menu in iTunes, there is an option to "Choose Photos to Share with AppleTV...".


When I disable that option, close iTunes, and then relaunch iTunes, "com.apple.MediaLibraryService" does not appear in the process list, and iTunes returns to using only about 130 MB of memory.


Of course, the obvious side-effect is that you will not be access Photos from your Mac on the AppleTV.


Let me know if this worked for you.

Dec 10, 2013 9:15 PM in response to edzHelp

I found that after migrating my iTunes library, my Photo Sharing location didn't exist any longer due to structure change.

When I opened "Choose Photos to Share with AppleTV" -- it gave me a pop-up warning that my locaiton "" didn't exist.

In seeing that, I created a new, empty folder & added that & re-launched iTunes. 99.6% CPU still to that process. Going back in & unchecking Photo Sharing & restarting iTunes did resolve the issue.

Dec 28, 2013 8:13 AM in response to Johannes Lietz

@Johannes, did you try what I suggested in my post above:


"I have iTunes Home Sharing enabled in iTunes. Looking at the File | Home Sharing | menu in iTunes, there is an option to "Choose Photos to Share with AppleTV...".


When I disable that option, close iTunes, and then relaunch iTunes, "com.apple.MediaLibraryService" does not appear in the process list, and iTunes returns to using only about 130 MB of memory.


Of course, the obvious side-effect is that you will not be access Photos from your Mac on the AppleTV."

Dec 30, 2013 3:07 PM in response to edzHelp

@edzHelp: Yes, I restarted iTunes after disabling photo sharing, and I also rebooted my Mac. Today, after the reboot, it took a few hours until com.apple.MediaLibraryService appeared at 100%. It does not run automatically when iTunes is running, but runs only if iTunes is running and it always quits when I quit iTunes.


I do not use iPhoto, but I use Aperture, which is the same library format. The Aperture.aplibrary itself is on my local system drive inside my home folder. But a lot of my RAW files are stored outside of the library as referenced image: some on my second HDD inside my MacBook Pro, some on external drives (that are currently disconnected). Aperture allowes you to relocate your RAW files through a menu command.

What is com.apple.MediaLibraryService?

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple ID.