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restart after sleep

I have been having great stress restarting my MBP/Yosemite after sleep. Was less of a problem before Yosemite, but has been happening about half the time I use sleep over the past month. It had been taking 3-4 hours to get the MBP to properly start - the progress bar gets about half-way, though that is variable. I have an Elgato dock, Dell Monitor, LaCie backup hard drives - but disconnect them when I have problems restarting. I tried reseting SMC, Safe reboots and reset NVRAM/PRAM - and then occasionally something would work. After reading (again) through several communities I tried switching off the router (Apple Airport Extreme) and all is OK. Does anyone know if this is the permanent solution? Why are Apple products incompatible?

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Mavericks (10.9.1)

Posted on Nov 21, 2014 5:06 PM

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7 replies

Nov 21, 2014 11:22 PM in response to Linc Davis

Hi, I've only turned the router off once and that was after the startup routines were stuck about halfway for 15 minutes. Normal startup isn't a problem, but recovery from sleep is variable and at times agony. My wife's Macbook Air (Yosemite) has never had the same problem. The problem has been trying to narrow down what might be the problem - but it gets tiring waiting for a few hours to get back to work.

As mentioned I connect an Elgato Thunderbolt dock, with a Dell Monitor, and a couple of LaCie back up drives (500g each). In other places the drives don't cause any problems and I've used the Monitor with this rMBP and a previous MBP without any difficulties - this includes turning the power off to the monitor when I put the rMBP to sleep. I turn the power back on for all peripherals before trying to wake the laptop. The main new thing is the dock and when the restart gets stuck I've disconnected the dock, but its not helped.

It is also frustrating that the safe boot doesn't always seem to work - I'm not sure if I hit the shift button a milli-second too early or too late.

Any thoughts

Nov 22, 2014 8:54 AM in response to Olive66

Step 1

Take all the applicable steps in this support article. That's the starting point for any further efforts to solve the problem. Please read the whole article carefully (some of it is hidden by disclosure triangles) and don't skip any of the steps, including the ones under the heading "Additional troubleshooting." If you don't understand any of the steps, ask for guidance.

Step 2

If you're running OS X 10.8.5 or earlier, from the menu bar select

 ▹ System Preferences... ▹ Accessibility

If the checkbox at the bottom marked

Enable access for assistive devices

is checked, uncheck it and test.

If you're running OS X 10.9 or later, select

 ▹ System Preferences... ▹ Security & Privacy ▹ Privacy ▹ Accessibility

If any applications are listed on the right and have a checked box next to them, uncheck all the boxes and test. You may first have to click the padlock icon in the lower left corner of the window and authenticate as an administrator to unlock the settings.

Step 3

In the Energy Saver pane of System Preferences, uncheck the box marked

Put hard disks to sleep when possible

Step 4

This and the next step must be taken as an administrator. If you have only one user account, you are the administrator.

Launch the Console application in any of the following ways:

☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)

☞ In the Finder, select Go Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.

☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Console in the icon grid.

In the Console window, select

DIAGNOSTIC AND USAGE INFORMATION System Diagnostic Reports

(not Diagnostic and Usage Messages) from the log list on the left. If you don't see that heading, select

View Show Log List

from the menu bar.

There is a disclosure triangle to the left of the list item. If the triangle is pointing to the right, click it so that it points down. You may see one or more reports with a name that begins with "Sleep Wake Failure" followed by a date. Select the most recent one. The contents of the report will appear on the right. Use copy and paste to post the entire contents—the text, not a screenshot.

I know the report is long, maybe several hundred lines. Please post all of it anyway.

Step 5

In the Console window, select

DIAGNOSTIC AND USAGE INFORMATION Diagnostic and Usage Messages

In the search box in the window's toolbar, enter "powerd" (without the quotes.)

You may see one or more lines like this:

com.apple.message.signature: Platform Failure

If you do see that, and you did everything in the preceeding steps, then you're dealing with an internal hardware fault. Make a "Genius" appointment at an Apple Store, or go to another authorized service provider.

May 15, 2015 6:29 PM in response to Olive66

Since the latest upgrade to 10.10.3 starting up after sleep has become worse. It doesn't seem to matter if I have any other gear attached to the MBP or not. It gets into an endless loop and I need to restart 2-3 times before things are operational. These problems have been far more common with Yosemite than with previous versions of the MacOS. I have all the 'energy saver' options turned off, which helps.

A related problem is sometimes after sleep the desktop and programs are in some suspended mode. I see what I was working on, the mouse is functioning but no action occurs and a complete reboot is needed. Any advice?

restart after sleep

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