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mac book freeze 5sec after boot but not in safe mode

hello guys i just got my MCP retina display 13 inch model 2014 it was working perfectly and yesterday it suddenly freezed i turned it off and when i turned it on it freezed just 5sec after the boot i dont even have enough time to enter my password to log into my account i left it for two hours and nothing i can the mice but i can't do any action and there is like a roulette that appears in stand of the mice i can only use it in safe i tried apple diagnostic and it shows nothing i tried to delete the disc between i did i got the forbidden sign when i try to boot and i didn't have any security copy before the problem so i dont know what to do.

sorry for my english and hope you guys can help me find a solution

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X El Capitan (10.11)

Posted on Oct 18, 2015 5:25 AM

Reply
Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Oct 18, 2015 9:50 AM

It operates in safe mode, correct?


If so, reset the SMC and NVRAM:


https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201295


https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204063


Will it boot normally?


Ciao.

10 replies

Oct 18, 2015 7:25 AM in response to amine239

1. This procedure is a diagnostic test. It changes nothing, for better or worse, and therefore will not, in itself, solve the problem. But with the aid of the test results, the solution may take a few minutes, instead of hours or days.

The test works on OS X 10.7 ("Lion") and later. I don't recommend running it on older versions of OS X. It will do no harm, but it won't do much good either.

Don't be put off by the complexity of these instructions. The process is much less complicated than the description. You do harder tasks with the computer all the time.

2. If you don't already have a current backup, back up all data before doing anything else. The backup is necessary on general principle, not because of anything in the test procedure. Backup is always a must, and when you're having any kind of trouble with the computer, you may be at higher than usual risk of losing data, whether you follow these instructions or not.

There are ways to back up a computer that isn't fully functional. Ask if you need guidance.

3. Below are instructions to run a UNIX shell script, a type of program. As I wrote above, it changes nothing. It doesn't send or receive any data on the network. All it does is to generate a human-readable report on the state of the computer. That report goes nowhere unless you choose to share it. If you prefer, you can act on it yourself without disclosing the contents to me or anyone else.

You should be wondering whether you can believe me, and whether it's safe to run a program at the behest of a stranger. In general, no, it's not safe and I don't encourage it.

In this case, however, there are ways for you to decide whether the program is safe without having to trust me. First, you can read it. Unlike an application that you download and click to run, it's transparent, so anyone with the requisite skill can verify what it does.

You may not be able to understand the script yourself. But variations of it have been posted on this website thousands of times over a period of years. The site is hosted by Apple, which does not allow it to be used to distribute harmful software. Any one of the millions of registered users could have read the script and raised the alarm if it was harmful. Then I would not be here now and you would not be reading this message. See, for example, this discussion.

Another indication that the test is safe can be found in this thread, and this one, for example, where the comment in which I suggested it was recommended by one of the Apple Community Specialists, as explained here.

Nevertheless, if you can't satisfy yourself that these instructions are safe, don't follow them. Ask for other options.

4. Here's a general summary of what you need to do, if you choose to proceed:

☞ Copy a particular line of text to the Clipboard.

☞ Paste into the window of another application.

☞ Wait for the test to run. It usually takes a few minutes.

☞ Paste the results, which will have been copied automatically, back into a reply on this page.

These are not specific instructions; just an overview. The details are in parts 7 and 8 of this comment. The sequence is: copy, paste, wait, paste again. You don't need to copy a second time.

5. Try to test under conditions that reproduce the problem, as far as possible. For example, if the computer is intermittently slow, run the test during a slowdown.

You may have started up in safe mode. If the system is now in safe mode and works well enough in normal mode to run the test, restart as usual before running it. If you can only test in safe mode, do that.

6. If you have more than one user, and only one user is affected by the problem,, and the affected user is not an administrator, then please run the test twice: once while logged in as the affected user, and once as an administrator. The results may be different. The user that is created automatically on a new computer when you start it for the first time is an administrator. If you can't log in as an administrator, test as the affected user. Most personal Macs have only one user, and in that case this section doesn’t apply. Don't log in as root.

7. Load this linked web page (on the website "Pastebin.") The title of the page is "Diagnostic Test." Below the title is a text box headed by three small icons. The one on the right represents a clipboard. Click that icon to select the text, then copy it to the Clipboard on your computer by pressing the key combination command-C.

If the text doesn't highlight when you click the icon, select it by triple-clicking anywhere inside the box. Don't select the whole page, just the text in the box.

8. Launch the built-in Terminal 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 and start typing the name.

Click anywhere in the Terminal window to activate it. Paste from the Clipboard into the window by pressing command-V, then press return. The text you pasted should vanish immediately.

9. If you see an error message in the Terminal window such as "Syntax error" or "Event not found," enter

exec bash

and press return. Then paste the script again.

10. If you're logged in as an administrator, you'll be prompted for your login password. Nothing will be displayed when you type it. You will not see the usual dots in place of typed characters. Make sure caps lock is off. Type carefully and then press return. You may get a one-time warning to be careful. If you make three failed attempts to enter the password, the test will run anyway, but it will produce less information. If you don't know the password, or if you prefer not to enter it, just press return three times at the password prompt. Again, the script will still run.

If the test is taking much longer than usual to run because the computer is very slow, you might be prompted for your password a second time. The authorization that you grant by entering it expires automatically after five minutes.

If you're not logged in as an administrator, you won't be prompted for a password. The test will still run. It just won't do anything that requires administrator privileges.

11. The test may take a few minutes to run, depending on how many files you have and the speed of the computer. A computer that's abnormally slow may take longer to run the test. While it's running, a series of lines will appear in the Terminal window like this:

[Process started]

Part 1 of 8 done at … sec

Part 8 of 8 done at … sec

The test results are on the Clipboard.

Please close this window.

[Process completed]

The intervals between parts won't be exactly equal, but they give a rough indication of progress. The total number of parts may be different from what's shown here.

Wait for the final message "Process completed" to appear. If you don't see it within about ten minutes, the test probably won't complete in a reasonable time. In that case, press the key combination control-C or command-period to stop it. Then go to the next step. You'll have incomplete results, but still something. If you close the Terminal window while the test is still running, the partial results won't be saved and you'll have to start over.

12. When the test is complete, or if you stopped it because it was taking too long, quit Terminal. The results will have been saved to the Clipboard automatically. They are not shown in the Terminal window. Please don't copy anything from there. All you have to do is start a reply to this comment and then paste by pressing command-V again.

At the top of the results, there will be a line that begins with the words "Start time." If you don't see that, but instead see a mass of gibberish, you didn't wait for the "Process completed" message to appear in the Terminal window. Please wait for it and try again.

If any private information, such as your name or email address, appears in the results, anonymize it before posting. Usually that won't be necessary.

13. When you post the results, you might see an error message on the web page: "You have included content in your post that is not permitted," or "The message contains invalid characters." That's a bug in the software that runs this website. Please post the test results on Pastebin, then post a link here to the page you created.

14. This is a public forum, and others may give you advice based on the results of the test. They speak for themselves, not for me. The test itself is harmless, but whatever else you're told to do may not be. For others who choose to run it, I don't recommend that you post the test results on this website unless I asked you to.

______________________________________________________________

Copyright © 2014, 2015 by Linc Davis. As the sole author of this work (including the referenced "Diagnostic Test"), I reserve all rights to it except as provided in the Use Agreement for the Apple Support Communities website ("ASC"). Readers of ASC may copy it for their own personal use. Neither the whole nor any part may be redistributed.

Oct 18, 2015 10:12 AM in response to Linc Davis

1 Start time: 19:03:20 10/18/15

2

3 Revision: 1357

4

5 Model Identifier: MacBookPro11,1

6 System Version: OS X 10.11 (15A284)

7 Kernel Version: Darwin 15.0.0

8 Boot Mode: Safe

9 Time since boot: 15 minutes

10

11 USB

12

13 External USB 3.0 (Toshiba America Info. Systems, Inc.)

14

15 Activity

16

17 en0: in 146, out 6 (KiB/s)

18

19 Energy (lifetime)

20

21 kernel_task (UID 0): 24.59

22 WindowServer (UID 88): 15.09

23 backupd (UID 0): 10.71

24 com.apple.WebKit.WebContent (UID 501): 6.68

25

26 Energy (sampled)

27

28 kernel_task (UID 0): 13.67

29 backupd (UID 0): 12.66

30

31 Spotlight: Indexing and searching disabled

32

33 DNS: 8.8.8.8

34

35 Diagnostic reports

36

37 2015-10-18 WindowServer crash

38

39 I/O errors

40

41 disk2s2: close: journal is invalid. aborting outstanding transactions 1

42 disk2s2: do_jnl_io: strategy err 0x6 1

43

44 Volumes

45

46 disk0s2: /

47 disk1s2: /Volumes/TOSHIBA EXT

48

49 HID errors: 11

50

51 Kernel log

52

53 Oct 18 18:32:24 Process launchd [1] disabling system-wide I/O Throttling

54 Oct 18 18:32:24 Process launchd [1] disabling system-wide CPU Throttling

55 Oct 18 18:33:23 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0xa78682100e88f7b5, provider is 0xa786820f4f4938b5

56 Oct 18 18:33:23 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

57 Oct 18 18:33:23 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

58 Oct 18 18:33:24 klnke: failed to open /.com_kaspersky_ids_drop (err = 2)

59 Oct 18 18:37:39 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0x18b04141b7f64c15, provider is 0x18b04140f8b05d15

60 Oct 18 18:37:39 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

61 Oct 18 18:37:39 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

62 Oct 18 18:37:40 klnke: failed to open /.com_kaspersky_ids_drop (err = 2)

63 Oct 18 18:38:40 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0xd799a0d5f105f21f, provider is 0xd799a0d53203981f

64 Oct 18 18:38:40 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

65 Oct 18 18:38:40 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

66 Oct 18 18:38:41 klnke: failed to open /.com_kaspersky_ids_drop (err = 2)

67 Oct 18 18:42:18 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0x30498216c91f60c7, provider is 0x3049821609b953c7

68 Oct 18 18:42:18 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

69 Oct 18 18:42:18 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

70 Oct 18 18:42:19 klnke: failed to open /.com_kaspersky_ids_drop (err = 2)

71 Oct 18 18:44:56 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0xa5bc286b0c21efcd, provider is 0xa5bc286a4cec9fcd

72 Oct 18 18:44:56 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

73 Oct 18 18:44:56 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

74 Oct 18 18:44:57 klnke: failed to open /.com_kaspersky_ids_drop (err = 2)

75 Oct 18 18:48:52 IO80211ControllerMonitor::configureSubscriptions() failed to add subscriptionIO80211Controller::start _controller is 0xc04a298b78b5a05b, provider is 0xc04a298ab944685b

76 Oct 18 18:48:52 init: error getting PHY_MODE; using MODE_UNKNOWN

77 Oct 18 18:48:52 AppleUSBMultitouchDriver::checkStatus - received Status Packet, Payload 2: device was reinitialized

78

79 System log

80

81 Oct 18 19:02:34 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

82 Oct 18 19:02:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

83 Oct 18 19:02:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

84 Oct 18 19:02:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

85 Oct 18 19:02:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

86 Oct 18 19:02:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

87 Oct 18 19:02:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

88 Oct 18 19:03:04 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

89 Oct 18 19:03:04 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

90 Oct 18 19:03:04 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

91 Oct 18 19:03:14 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

92 Oct 18 19:03:14 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

93 Oct 18 19:03:14 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

94 Oct 18 19:03:24 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

95 Oct 18 19:03:24 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

96 Oct 18 19:03:24 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

97 Oct 18 19:03:34 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

98 Oct 18 19:03:34 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

99 Oct 18 19:03:34 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

100 Oct 18 19:03:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

101 Oct 18 19:03:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

102 Oct 18 19:03:44 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

103 Oct 18 19:03:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_watchdog_open) - IOIteratorNext failed (kr=0)

104 Oct 18 19:03:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( wd_daemon_init) - could not open connection with the kernel watchdog

105 Oct 18 19:03:54 watchdogd: [watchdog_daemon] @( main) - cannot initialize the watchdog service

106

107 launchd log

108

109 Oct 18 13:32:42 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

110 Oct 18 13:42:06 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

111 Oct 18 13:56:38 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

112 Oct 18 14:06:03 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

113 Oct 18 18:24:17 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

114 Oct 18 18:33:23 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

115 Oct 18 18:37:39 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

116 Oct 18 18:38:40 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

117 Oct 18 18:38:54 com.apple.xpc.launchd.user.domain.501.100008.Aqua: Could not import service from caller: caller = otherbsd.228, service = com.apple.photostream-agent, error = 119: Service is disabled

118 Oct 18 18:42:18 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

119 Oct 18 18:42:32 com.apple.xpc.launchd.user.domain.501.100007.Aqua: Could not import service from caller: caller = otherbsd.224, service = com.apple.photostream-agent, error = 119: Service is disabled

120 Oct 18 18:44:56 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

121 Oct 18 18:45:09 com.apple.xpc.launchd.user.domain.201.100009.Aqua: Could not import service from caller: caller = otherbsd.232, service = com.trendmicro.ATLoginItemHelper, error = 119: Service is disabled

122 Oct 18 18:45:09 com.apple.xpc.launchd.user.domain.201.100009.Aqua: Could not import service from caller: caller = otherbsd.232, service = com.apple.photostream-agent, error = 119: Service is disabled

123 Oct 18 18:45:09 MyListenerSocket: No PATH environment variable set. The application firewall will not work with this service.

124 Oct 18 18:45:09 MyListenerSocket: No PATH environment variable set. The application firewall will not work with this service.

125 Oct 18 18:48:52 com.apple.airplaydiagnostics.server: Unrecognized MachService property: ResetAtClose

126

127 Console log

128

129 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

130 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

131 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

132 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

133 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

134 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

135 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

136 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

137 Oct 18 14:12:09 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

138 Oct 18 14:12:10 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

139 Oct 18 14:12:10 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

140 Oct 18 14:12:10 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

141 Oct 18 14:12:10 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

142 Oct 18 14:12:14 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

143 Oct 18 14:12:14 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

144 Oct 18 14:12:14 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

145 Oct 18 14:12:14 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

146 Oct 18 14:12:14 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

147 Oct 18 14:12:15 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

148 Oct 18 14:12:15 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

149 Oct 18 14:12:15 storeaccountd: XPC error for connection com.apple.backupd.sandbox.xpc: Connection invalid

150 Oct 18 14:12:17 storeassetd: -[__NSDictionary0 downloads]: unrecognized selector sent to instance 0x7fdc71d01570

151 Oct 18 18:24:37 fontd: XType - wal checkpoint: 0, -1, -1.

152 Oct 18 18:42:33 fontd: Failed to open read-only database, regenerating DB

153 Oct 18 18:49:15 fontd: XType - wal checkpoint: 0, -1, -1.

154

155 Loaded kernel extensions

156

157 com.kaspersky.kext.klif (3.0.6a46)

158

159 System services loaded

160

161 com.apple.logd

162 - status: 1

163 com.apple.watchdogd

164

165 User login items

166

167 Kaspersky Internet Security

168 - /Applications/Kaspersky Anti-Virus For Mac.app

169

170 Safari extensions

171

172 Kaspersky URL Advisor

173 - com.kaspersky.urla

174 Virtual Keyboard

175 - com.kaspersky.vkbd

176

177 Firefox extensions

178

179 Adblock Plus

180 Adblock Plus Pop-up Addon

181

182 iCloud errors

183

184 Photos 17

185 cloudd 16

186 bird 7

187 comapple.CloudPhotosConfiguration 3

188 Finder 1

189

190 Continuity errors

191

192 sharingd 13

193 Finder 9

194 sharedfilelistd 2

195 UserAccountUpdater 2

196

197 Restricted files: 175

198

199 Lockfiles: 8

200

201 Global prefs (user)

202

203 AppleActionOnDoubleClick = Maximize

204

205 Contents of /Library/LaunchAgents/com.kaspersky.kav.gui.plist

206 - mod date: Oct 18 13:59:34 2015

207 - size (B): 667

208 - checksum: 2831085550

209

210 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

211 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

212 <plist version="1.0">

213 <dict>

214 <key>Label</key>

215 <string>com.kaspersky.kav.gui</string>

216 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

217 <array>

218 <string>/Library/Application Support/Kaspersky Lab/KAV/Applications/Kaspersky Anti-Virus Agent.app/Contents/MacOS/kav_agent</string>

219 <string>-autolaunch</string>

220 <string>1</string>

221 </array>

222 <key>RunAtLoad</key>

223 <true/>

224 <key>ServiceIPC</key>

225 <false/>

226 <key>WatchPaths</key>

227 <array>

228 <string>/Library/Application Support/Kaspersky Lab/KAV/kickstart_gui</string>

229 </array>

230 </dict>

231 </plist>

232

233 Contents of /Library/LaunchAgents/com.razer.rzupdater.plist

234 - mod date: Oct 2 20:17:12 2015

235 - size (B): 416

236 - checksum: 1756861206

237

238 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

239 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

240 <plist version="1.0">

241 <dict>

242 <key>Label</key>

243 <string>com.razer.rzupdater</string>

244 <key>OnDemand</key>

245 <false/>

246 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

247 <array>

248 <string>/Library/Application Support/Razer/RzUpdater.app/Contents/MacOS/RzUpdater</string>

249 </array>

250 </dict>

251 </plist>

252

253 Contents of /Library/LaunchAgents/com.razerzone.rzdeviceengine.plist

254 - mod date: Oct 2 20:17:20 2015

255 - size (B): 435

256 - checksum: 1165748985

257

258 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

259 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

260 <plist version="1.0">

261 <dict>

262 <key>Label</key>

263 <string>com.razerzone.rzdeviceengine</string>

264 <key>OnDemand</key>

265 <false/>

266 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

267 <array>

268 <string>/Library/Application Support/Razer/RzDeviceEngine.app/Contents/MacOS/RzDeviceEngine</string>

269 </array>

270 </dict>

271 </plist>

272

273 Contents of /Library/LaunchDaemons/com.kaspersky.kav.plist

274 - mod date: Oct 18 13:58:48 2015

275 - size (B): 830

276 - checksum: 1460032291

277

278 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

279 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

280 <plist version="1.0">

281 <dict>

282 <key>KeepAlive</key>

283 <dict>

284 <key>SuccessfulExit</key>

285 <false/>

286 </dict>

287 <key>Label</key>

288 <string>com.kaspersky.kav</string>

289 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

290 <array>

291 <string>/Library/Application Support/Kaspersky Lab/KAV/Binaries/kav</string>

292 <string>-r</string>

293 <string>-bl</string>

294 </array>

295 <key>RunAtLoad</key>

296 <true/>

297 <key>ServiceIPC</key>

298 <false/>

299 <key>StandardErrorPath</key>

300 <string>/var/log/kav_daemon_stderr.log</string>

301 <key>StandardOutPath</key>

302 <string>/var/log/kav_daemon_stdout.log</string>

303

304 ...and 6 more line(s)

305

306 Contents of /Library/LaunchDaemons/com.kaspersky.kav.plist.old

307 - mod date: Oct 18 18:47:21 2015

308 - size (B): 830

309 - checksum: 1460032291

310

311 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

312 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

313 <plist version="1.0">

314 <dict>

315 <key>KeepAlive</key>

316 <dict>

317 <key>SuccessfulExit</key>

318 <false/>

319 </dict>

320 <key>Label</key>

321 <string>com.kaspersky.kav</string>

322 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

323 <array>

324 <string>/Library/Application Support/Kaspersky Lab/KAV/Binaries/kav</string>

325 <string>-r</string>

326 <string>-bl</string>

327 </array>

328 <key>RunAtLoad</key>

329 <true/>

330 <key>ServiceIPC</key>

331 <false/>

332 <key>StandardErrorPath</key>

333 <string>/var/log/kav_daemon_stderr.log</string>

334 <key>StandardOutPath</key>

335 <string>/var/log/kav_daemon_stdout.log</string>

336

337 ...and 6 more line(s)

338

339 Contents of /Library/LaunchDaemons/com.microsoft.office.licensingV2.helper.plist

340 - mod date: Aug 7 09:55:38 2015

341 - size (B): 657

342 - checksum: 1698653368

343

344 <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>

345 <!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple//DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">

346 <plist version="1.0">

347 <dict>

348 <key>Label</key>

349 <string>com.microsoft.office.licensingV2.helper</string>

350 <key>MachServices</key>

351 <dict>

352 <key>com.microsoft.office.licensingV2.helper.port</key>

353 <true/>

354 </dict>

355 <key>Program</key>

356 <string>/Library/PrivilegedHelperTools/com.microsoft.office.licensingV2.helper< /string>

357 <key>ProgramArguments</key>

358 <array>

359 <string>/Library/PrivilegedHelperTools/com.microsoft.office.licensingV2.helper< /string>

360 </array>

361 </dict>

362 </plist>

363

364 Extensions

365

366 /Library/Extensions/RazerHid.kext

367 - com.razer.common.razerhid

368 /Library/Extensions/klif.kext

369 - com.kaspersky.kext.klif

370 /Library/Extensions/klnke.kext

371 - com.kaspersky.nke

372 /System/Library/Extensions/klif.kext

373 - com.kaspersky.kext.klif

374 /System/Library/Extensions/klnke.kext

375 - com.kaspersky.nke

376

377 Frameworks

378

379 /Library/Frameworks/RzAudioSettings.framework

380 - com.razerzone.RzAudioSettings

381 /Library/Frameworks/RzSkinToolkit.framework

382 - com.Razer.RzSkinToolkit

383 /Library/Frameworks/RzStorageSDK.framework

384 - com.razer.RzStorageSDK

385

386 PrefPane

387

388 /Library/PreferencePanes/Flash Player.prefPane

389 - com.adobe.flashplayerpreferences

390 /Library/PreferencePanes/Tuxera NTFS.prefPane

391 - com.tuxera.ntfs.mac.prefpane

392

393 App extensions

394

395 com.microsoft.onenote.mac.shareextension

396

397 Modifications

398

399 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Config/game.cfg

400 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Config/PersistedSettings.json

401 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Config/input.ini

402 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T17-42-23_r3dlog.txt

403 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T18-32-17_r3dlog.txt

404 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T18-19-01_r3dlog.txt

405 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T20-31-08_r3dlog.txt

406 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T20-37-12_r3dlog.txt

407 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T20-50-52_r3dlog.txt

408 file added: /Applications/League of Legends.app/Contents/LoL/Logs/Game - R3d Logs/2015-10-02T22-09-27_r3dlog.txt

409 ...

410 file modified: /Applications/Preview.app/Contents/Resources/psd.icns

411

412 Bad kernel extensions

413

414 /System/Library/Extensions/AppleOSXUSBNCM.kext

415

416 Installations

417

418 Tuxera NTFS 2015: 17/10/15 17:12

419 Tuxera NTFS 2015: 17/10/15 15:26

420 Razer Synapse: 2/10/15 20:17

421 Uninstall Razer Synapse: 2/10/15 20:17

422 RzSkinToolkit: 2/10/15 20:17

423

424 Elapsed time (sec): 273

Oct 18, 2015 11:12 AM in response to amine239

Mac users often ask whether they should install "anti-virus" (AV) or "anti-malware" software. The short answer is "no," but it may give the wrong impression that there is no threat from what are loosely called "viruses." There is a threat.

1. This is a comment on what you should—and should not—do to protect yourself from malicious software ("malware") that circulates on the Internet and gets onto a computer as an unintended consequence of the user's actions.

It does not apply to software, such as keystroke loggers, that may be installed deliberately by an intruder who has hands-on access to the computer, or who has been able to take control of it remotely. That threat is in a different category, and there's no easy way to defend against it. AV software is not intended to, and does not, defend against such attacks.

The comment is long because the issue is complex. The key points are in sections 5 and 11.

OS X now implements three layers of built-in protection specifically against malware, not counting runtime protections such as file quarantine, execute disable, sandboxing, system integrity protection, system library randomization, and address space layout randomization that may also guard against other kinds of exploits.

2. All versions of OS X since 10.6.7 have been able to detect known Mac malware in downloaded files, and to block insecure web plugins. This feature is transparent to the user. Internally Apple calls it "XProtect."

The malware recognition database used by XProtect is automatically updated; however, you shouldn't rely on it, because the attackers are always at least a day ahead of the defenders.

The following caveats apply to XProtect:

☞ It can be bypassed by some third-party networking software, such as BitTorrent clients and Java applets.

☞ It only applies to software downloaded from the network. Software installed from a CD or other media is not checked.

As new versions of OS X are released, it's not clear whether Apple will indefinitely continue to maintain the XProtect database of older versions such as 10.6. The security of obsolete system versions may eventually be degraded. Security updates to the code of obsolete systems will stop being released at some point, and that may leave them open to other kinds of attack besides malware.

3. Starting with OS X 10.7.5, there has been a second layer of built-in malware protection, designated "Gatekeeper" by Apple. By default, applications and Installer packages downloaded from the network will only run if they're digitally signed by a developer with a certificate issued by Apple. Software certified in this way hasn't been checked for security by Apple unless it comes from the App Store, but you can be reasonably sure that it hasn't been modified by anyone other than the developer. His identity is known to Apple, so he could be held legally responsible if he distributed malware. That may not mean much if the developer lives in a country with a weak legal system (see below.)

Gatekeeper doesn't depend on a database of known malware. It has, however, the same limitations as XProtect, and in addition the following:

☞ It can easily be disabled or overridden by the user.

☞ A malware attacker could find a way around it, or could get control of a code-signing certificate under false pretenses, or could simply ignore the consequences of distributing codesigned malware.

☞ An App Store developer could find a way to bypass Apple's oversight, or the oversight could fail due to human error.

Apple has taken far too long to revoke the codesigning certificates of some known abusers, thereby diluting the value of Gatekeeper and the Developer ID program. Those lapses don't involve App Store products, however.

For the reasons given, App Store products, and—to a lesser extent—other applications recognized by Gatekeeper as signed, are safer than others, but they can't be considered absolutely safe. "Sandboxed" applications may prompt for access to private data, such as your contacts, or for access to the network. Think before granting that access. Sandbox security is based on user input. Never click through any request for authorization without thinking.

4. Starting with OS X 10.8.3, a third layer of protection has been added: a "Malware Removal Tool" (MRT). MRT runs automatically in the background when you update the OS. It checks for, and removes, malware that may have evaded the other protections via a Java exploit (see below.) MRT also runs when you install or update the Apple-supplied Java runtime (but not the Oracle runtime.) Like XProtect, MRT is effective against known threats, but not against unknown ones. It notifies you if it finds malware, but otherwise there's no user interface to MRT.

5. The built-in security features of OS X reduce the risk of malware attack, but they are not, and never will be, complete protection. Malware is a problem of human behavior, not machine behavior, and no technological fix alone is going to solve it. Trusting software to protect you will only make you more vulnerable.

The best defense is always going to be your own intelligence. With the possible exception of Java exploits, all known malware circulating on the Internet that affects a fully-updated installation of OS X 10.6 or later takes the form of so-called "Trojan horses," which can only have an effect if the victim is duped into running them. The threat therefore amounts to a battle of wits between you and Internet criminals. If you're better informed than they think you are, you'll win. That means, in effect, that you always stay within a safe harbor of computing practices. How do you know when you're leaving the safe harbor? Below are some warning signs of danger.

Software from an untrustworthy source

☞ Software with a corporate brand, such as Adobe Flash Player, doesn't come directly from the developer’s website. Do not trust an alert from any website to update Flash, or your browser, or any other software. A genuine alert that Flash is outdated and blocked is shown on this support page. Follow the instructions on the support page in that case. Otherwise, assume that the alert is fake and someone is trying to scam you into installing malware. If you see such alerts on more than one website, ask for instructions.

☞ Software of any kind is distributed via BitTorrent, or Usenet, or on a website that also distributes pirated music or movies.

☞ Rogue websites such as Softonic, Soft32, CNET Download, and SourceForge distribute free applications that have been packaged in a superfluous "installer."

☞ The software is advertised by means of spam or intrusive web ads. Any ad, on any site, that includes a direct link to a download should be ignored.

Software that is plainly illegal or does something illegal

☞ High-priced commercial software such as Photoshop is "cracked" or "free."

☞ An application helps you to infringe copyright, for instance by circumventing the copy protection on commercial software, or saving streamed media for reuse without permission. All "YouTube downloaders" are in this category, though not all are necessarily malicious.

Conditional or unsolicited offers from strangers

☞ A telephone caller or a web page tells you that you have a “virus” and offers to help you remove it. (Some reputable websites did legitimately warn visitors who were infected with the "DNSChanger" malware. That exception to this rule no longer applies.)

☞ A web site offers free content such as video or music, but to use it you must install a “codec,” “plug-in,” "player," "downloader," "extractor," or “certificate” that comes from that same site, or an unknown one.

☞ You win a prize in a contest you never entered.

☞ Someone on a message board such as this one is eager to help you, but only if you download an application of his choosing.

☞ A "FREE WI-FI !!!" network advertises itself in a public place such as an airport, but is not provided by the management.

☞ Anything online that you would expect to pay for is "free."

Unexpected events

☞ A file is downloaded automatically when you visit a web page, with no other action on your part. Delete any such file without opening it.

☞ You open what you think is a document and get an alert that it's "an application downloaded from the Internet." Click Cancel and delete the file. Even if you don't get the alert, you should still delete any file that isn't what you expected it to be.

☞ An application does something you don't expect, such as asking for permission to access your contacts, your location, or the Internet for no obvious reason.

☞ Software is attached to email that you didn't request, even if it comes (or seems to come) from someone you trust.

I don't say that leaving the safe harbor just once will necessarily result in disaster, but making a habit of it will weaken your defenses against malware attack. Any of the above scenarios should, at the very least, make you uncomfortable.

6. Java on the Web (not to be confused with JavaScript, to which it's not related, despite the similarity of the names) is a weak point in the security of any system. Java is, among other things, a platform for running complex applications in a web page. That was always a bad idea, and Java's developers have proven themselves incapable of implementing it without also creating a portal for malware to enter. Past Java exploits are the closest thing there has ever been to a Windows-style virus affecting OS X. Merely loading a page with malicious Java content could be harmful.

Fortunately, client-side Java on the Web is obsolete and mostly extinct. Only a few outmoded sites still use it. Try to hasten the process of extinction by avoiding those sites, if you have a choice. Forget about playing games or other non-essential uses of Java.

Java is not included in OS X 10.7 and later. Discrete Java installers are distributed by Apple and by Oracle (the developer of Java.) Don't use either one unless you need it. Most people don't. If Java is installed, disable itnot JavaScript—in your browsers.

Regardless of version, experience has shown that Java on the Web can't be trusted. If you must use a Java applet for a task on a specific site, enable Java only for that site in Safari. Never enable Java for a public website that carries third-party advertising. Use it only on well-known, login-protected, secure websites without ads. In Safari 6 or later, you'll see a padlock icon in the address bar when visiting a secure site.

7. Another perennial weak point is Adobe Flash Player. Like Java, Flash is in well-deserved decline, but Flash content is still much more widespread than Java content on the Web. If you choose to install the Flash plugin, you can reduce your exposure to Flash by checking the box marked

Stop plug-ins to save power

in Advanced tab of the Safari preferences window, if it's not already checked. Consider also installing a Safari extension such as "ClickToFlash" or "ClickToPlugin." They will prevent Flash content from loading automatically, and will also cause non-Flash video to be substituted for Flash on YouTube and maybe some other sites. I've tested those extensions and found them safe, but you should always do your own research before deciding whether to trust any third-party software.

8. Stay within the safe harbor, and you’ll be as safe from malware as you can practically be. The rest of this comment concerns what you should not do to protect yourself.

Never install any AV or "Internet security" products for the Mac if you have a choice, as they are all worse than useless. If you are required by a (mistaken) institutional policy to install some kind of AV, pick one of the free apps in the Mac App Store—nothing else.

Why shouldn't you use AV products?

☞ To recognize malware, the software depends on a database of known threats, which is always at least a day out of date. This technique is a proven failure, as a major AV software vendor has admitted. Most attacks are "zero-day"—that is, previously unknown. Recognition-based AV does not defend against such attacks, and the enterprise IT industry is coming to the realization that traditional AV software is worthless.

☞ The design is usually predicated on the nonexistent threat that malware may be injected at any time, anywhere in the file system. Malware is downloaded from the network; it doesn't materialize from nowhere. In order to meet that nonexistent threat, commercial AV software modifies or duplicates low-level functions of the operating system, which is a waste of resources and a common cause of instability, bugs, and poor performance.

☞ By modifying the operating system, the software may also create weaknessesthat could be exploited by malware attackers.

☞ Most importantly, a false sense of security is dangerous. That fact pertains to all AV software there will ever be, no matter what else changes.

9. A free AV product from the Mac App Store is harmless as long you don't let it delete or move any files. Ignore any warnings it may give you about "heuristics" or "phishing." Those warnings, if they're not merely false positives, refer to the text of email messages or cached web pages, not to malware.

An AV app is not needed, and can't be relied upon, for protection against OS X malware. It's useful, if at all, only for detecting Windows malware, and even for that use it's not really effective, because new Windows malware is emerging much faster than OS X malware.

Windows malware can't harm you directly (unless, of course, you use Windows.) Just don't pass it on to anyone else. A malicious attachment in email is usually easy to recognize by the name alone. An actual example:

London Terror Moovie.avi [124 spaces] Checked By Norton Antivirus.exe

You don't need software to tell you that's a Windows trojan. Software may be able to tell you which trojan it is, but who cares? In practice, there's no reason to use recognition software unless an organizational policy requires it. Windows malware is so widespread that you should assume it's in every email attachment until proven otherwise. Nevertheless, a free AV product from the App Store may serve a purpose if it satisfies an ill-informed network administrator who says you must have some kind of AV application. An App Store product won't modify the operating system; in fact, it won't do anything unless you run it.

10. It seems to be a common belief that the built-in Application Firewall acts as a barrier to infection, or prevents malware from functioning. It does neither. It blocks inbound connections to certain network services you're running, such as file sharing. It's disabled by default and you should leave it that way if you're behind a router on a private home or office network. Activate it only when you're on an untrusted network, for instance a public Wi-Fi hotspot, where you don't want to provide services. Disable any services you don't use in the Sharing preference pane. All are disabled by default.

11. As a Mac user, you don't have to live in fear that your computer may be infected every time you install software, read email, or visit a web page. But neither can you assume that you will always be safe from exploitation, no matter what you do. Navigating the Internet is like walking the streets of a big city. It can be as safe or as dangerous as you choose to make it. The greatest harm done by AV software is precisely its selling point: it makes people feel safe. They may then feel safe enough to take risks from which the software doesn't protect them. Nothing can lessen the need for safe computing practices.

Oct 23, 2015 12:11 PM in response to Linc Davis

Hi Linc,


I have the same issue as amin239 with my MacBook Pro 10.9.2 Retina 13" Late 2013.


My machine will freeze when booted normally, sometimes as soon as the login screen appears but sometimes after a few minutes of use - it seems to happen once I stop 'doing something' mainly when I stop moving the mouse but sometimes whilst I am mid operation.


It works just fine in safe mode and I am writing this post whilst in safe mode.


I have run the test you pasted and have also loaded my results:

http://pastebin.com/tD1R02nL


If you are able to have a look and suggest anything I would be really grateful.


Thanks, Anil.

mac book freeze 5sec after boot but not in safe mode

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