ksangani

Q: Macbook Pro freeze after login (Yosemite)

I installed Yosemite on my MB Pro 2013. Installation went fine and needed to restart. Since then MBP freezes after login screen with progressbar stuck at half.I don't hear much noise so doubt any pending activity is going. Left for few hours just in case couple of times but no luck.

 

I tried few things which did not help.

 

1. PRAM reset

2. Disk repar using Command+R during boot up

 

I have seen discussions about issues during Yosemite installation but this is after installation and first reboot. Any help is appreciated.

 

Thanks

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Mavericks (10.9.5)

Posted on Oct 18, 2014 11:46 PM

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Q: Macbook Pro freeze after login (Yosemite)

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  • by rWhitman33,

    rWhitman33 rWhitman33 Jan 28, 2015 8:35 AM in response to pips1971
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 28, 2015 8:35 AM in response to pips1971

    This question does not pertain to this thread.

  • by pips1971,

    pips1971 pips1971 Jan 28, 2015 8:37 AM in response to rWhitman33
    Level 1 (10 points)
    Jan 28, 2015 8:37 AM in response to rWhitman33

    ok nob just wanting a bit of help  g f y s

  • by rWhitman33,

    rWhitman33 rWhitman33 Jan 28, 2015 8:43 AM in response to Lawrence Paulson
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 28, 2015 8:43 AM in response to Lawrence Paulson

    See my Jan 12/13th posts to this thread.

  • by rWhitman33,

    rWhitman33 rWhitman33 Jan 28, 2015 8:48 AM in response to pips1971
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 28, 2015 8:48 AM in response to pips1971

    Definition of a 'Nob': A person or persons that does not know how to use search functions to find forum threads related to their issue.

  • by Mac Atack,

    Mac Atack Mac Atack Jan 28, 2015 9:15 PM in response to ksangani
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Jan 28, 2015 9:15 PM in response to ksangani

    OK so I finally got my macbook back up and running after 2 weeks of ****.

    I understand that in these forums some issues have helped some people while others like myself were slowing getting worse like being stuck in quick sand.

     

    Heres what I did

    1. Backup everything onto a separate drive.

    2. If you have a spare drive backup everything again (I wanted to make sure I had everything backed up)

    3. Go to your local mac repair shop who will charge about $30-$50 to erase your disk and reinstall a new Yosemite operating system.


    No more issues.

  • by Lawrence Paulson,

    Lawrence Paulson Lawrence Paulson Jan 29, 2015 3:38 AM in response to Mac Atack
    Level 1 (15 points)
    Jan 29, 2015 3:38 AM in response to Mac Atack

    It should not be necessary to pay somebody else to erase your disk and reinstall Yosemite. Even if your machine will not boot normally, it should boot into the Recovery Partition, and then you can easily do such things yourself:

     

    OS X: About OS X Recovery - Apple Support

  • by Mac Atack,

    Mac Atack Mac Atack Feb 1, 2015 9:27 PM in response to Lawrence Paulson
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Feb 1, 2015 9:27 PM in response to Lawrence Paulson

    I understand that I didn't need to go to a repair shop to wipe my disk and reinstall Yosemite.

    I ran the internet repair and was able to reload Lion however after I used migration assistant to reinstall my profile and files, I backed up the system then the system shat itself and stopped loading at all. No logo just a grey screen and the fans running fast and the laptop running hot.

    The laptop essentially looked dead. No access to Recovery Partition No access to Internet Recovery nothing. So that was not an option otherwise I would not have gone to the repair shop. This also meant that I was unable to run disk permissions and NVRAM did not fix the issue.

    I also chose to go to a repair shop because I do not have an physical operating system on USB or disk available to load.

    After 2 hrs at the shop my macbook pro was back up and running and all for $30!

    Cant put a price on the hours that I spent trying the numerous fixes on these forums.

    Seriously I saved more than $30 by taking it to the shop.

  • by it.technical,

    it.technical it.technical Feb 17, 2015 6:32 AM in response to Mac Atack
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 17, 2015 6:32 AM in response to Mac Atack

    Hi we have to do the following after installing this zip found in a different forum http://www.hammen.net/downloads/yosemiteboothangfix.zip

     

    • Restart in safe mode, then login
    • Disable the wireless in the top right
    • Restart normally (It will appear to sit there doing nothing (as before) if you tap ‘space’ and ‘enter’ keys it will then login
    • Enable wireless
  • by kcastrok,

    kcastrok kcastrok Feb 17, 2015 6:48 PM in response to ksangani
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Feb 17, 2015 6:48 PM in response to ksangani

    Hi,

    I'm on a macbook air mid 2013 - up to date Yosemite.

    I was using Android Studio with a phone connected and I tried to open the Android Emulator when the Program crashed.

    I restarted the computer and now it freezes after I login.

    I tried all the solutions above and none of them worked. I'm not able to enter safe boot mode as well.

    I could only boot from boot camp and backup some stuff using windows.

    Anyone has come with some different solution that worked?

  • by ddgiants,

    ddgiants ddgiants Feb 19, 2015 5:30 AM in response to ksangani
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Feb 19, 2015 5:30 AM in response to ksangani

    You guys are lucky. Mine freezes at login overnight. I don't have to close the lid. Frustrating as **** especially when work is in progress.

  • by Mac Atack,

    Mac Atack Mac Atack Feb 24, 2015 3:55 PM in response to ddgiants
    Level 1 (5 points)
    Feb 24, 2015 3:55 PM in response to ddgiants

    As I have said before all system issues may be slightly different and the fixes in these forums may or may not be useful for your particular situation.

     

    In my case most solutions did fix the errors (sometimes only for a day or for a week).

    It turns out that I had another issue to deal with that wasn't readily apparent at the time.

     

    After I had installed Yosemite I had the slow start up, over heating, the fans working overtime and general freezing.

    As my Macbook Pro is a 2011 model it is prone to have a potential GPU failure due to excessive heat. The heat that was being generated due to the Yosemite issue eventually sealed the fate of my machine. I had none of the telltale signs of Blue screen with Black lines, I just had freezing, overheating and excessive fan usage.

    Yes you could argue the point that it would have failed regardless of Yosemite and I agree.

    That being said it takes me back to the point that while the symptoms seem to be similar if you're not getting any satisfaction from the provided solutions then go and seek some expert assistance preferably from an authorised apple repairer.

  • by latupej,

    latupej latupej Mar 2, 2015 4:42 PM in response to Mac Atack
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Mar 2, 2015 4:42 PM in response to Mac Atack

    Similar issue with a Macbook Pro but I have had Yosemite running successfully for awhile now and not sure what caused this without digging into system/debug logs...

     

    After login, the install progress bar never made it past 20% and hung...forever

     

    Tried all the standard keyboard start up techniques, please visit (OS X Yosemite: Ways to start up your Mac) Be sure to visit the links at the bottom too:

    CMD + OPT + R + P (many, many, times...no luck)

    CMD + T

    CMD + SHIFT + V

    CMD + R

    CTRL + SPACE + RETURN (did not work either)

    Tried all these techniques with all the prescribed steps associated to each start-up = no fix

     

    Tried the "unsigned" extensions steps previously recommended:

    <terminal>$system_profiler SPExtensionsDataType

    keyboard shortcut: then CMD + F <search for Not signed> extensions

    #note did not finding anything not signed by Apple

     

    Google found this gem as I was pretty sure this had something to do with FileVault

    https://derflounder.wordpress.com/2011/11/23/using-the-command-line-to-unlock-or -decrypt-your-filevault-2-encrypted-boot-drive/

    <terminal>$diskutil corestorage list

    or

    <terminal>$diskutil cs list

    ~note I could see the encrypted volume...duggggghhh! My cat must have enabled it

     

    Brain LED started to flicker...just barely (my problem was definitely related to filevault)

     

    I pivoted back to my old friend: CMD + R

    Went into disk utility

    Selected main HDD

    From disk utility file menu, choose UNLOCK

    From same menu, choose DECRYPT

    ***NOTE, DO NOT UNPLUG YOUR MAG or POWER CABLE AS THIS WILL STOP DECRYPTION***

    After decryption completed (for the record, since I could not get into the O/S, I had to keep booting into recovery tools, then opening up TERMINAL (in the File Menu) and checking by issuing this command <terminal>$diskutil cs list  (just read the derflounder link above...it explains everything)

    Reebooted...

    No luck

    Then, I remember I had a USB flash drive (e.g., 128GB stick) that had the Yosemite installer on it, turned off the Macbook Pro, inserted the stick, OPTION key down, power on, selected Yosemite Installer...

     

    Long story short I was down for a day but the last step finally repaired my installation and I am now able to reboot normally and logon. going to do some backups, etc before I enable FileVault again

     

    Good luck

  • by Lawrence Paulson,

    Lawrence Paulson Lawrence Paulson Mar 3, 2015 4:06 AM in response to latupej
    Level 1 (15 points)
    Mar 3, 2015 4:06 AM in response to latupej

    There is another thread here that worked for me. In particular, the following:

     

    I have an open ticket with Applecare Enterprise Support. It is a known issue that has been reported to the product development team with no ETA for a fix. The procedure that has worked every time for us and has been the recommended procedure for temporary resolution is as follows in Single User Mode.

     

    /sbin/mount -uw /
    rm -rf /System/Library/Caches/*
    rm /private/var/db/BootCache.playlist
    reboot

     

    If you prefer, you can access the Terminal via the recovery partition rather than through Single User Mode. I've tried it once, and it worked. Other tricks including Safe Boot are a waste of time if you have this particular issue.

  • by ycooreman,

    ycooreman ycooreman Mar 17, 2015 2:40 PM in response to mac1994
    Level 1 (4 points)
    Mac OS X
    Mar 17, 2015 2:40 PM in response to mac1994

    This seems to have worked for me as well.

    In my case it was CmUSBMassStorage.kext from Wibu Codemeter.

  • by Frozen boot,

    Frozen boot Frozen boot Mar 23, 2015 1:04 AM in response to ksangani
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Mar 23, 2015 1:04 AM in response to ksangani

    i have this problem too. please help apple

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