Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library

Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library 3,7/5 7197 reviews
  1. Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library Hours
  2. Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library House

Apple’s new Photos program in OS X 10.10.3 may have difficulty when migrating your old iPhoto library. When it first runs, Photos will create a new library, and do so by migrating from an existing Aperture or iPhoto library, if present. However, there may be a couple of issues where the program will be unable to do so.

Jan 05, 2011  How can I force quit a stuck application in Mac OS X? January 5, 2011 / Dave Taylor / MacOS X Help / 1 Comment. Every so often one of the game I like to play gets stuck and becomes unresponsive on my Mac system. I can’t select it, clicking on its window just produces a spinning wheel, and I end up having to reboot.

I recently migrated my library from iPhoto to the Apple Photos app. There's probably around 13,000 photos/videos in the library. After migrating the library, I closed Photos, and it is now been stuck 'Closing the library.' For two days. Mar 21, 2017  My photos on my mac just keeps saying 'closing the library' and I can't force quit it either. I've tried restarting and shutting down my computer but it wont let me until i can quit photos. Jul 11, 2016  I cannot access my photos. Message says closing library. How do I get back into photos? Then turning off and restarting the mac. To force Quit: go to the apple logo top left of screen, select force quit, then select the photos app! I cannot access my photos. Message says library closing. Mar 18, 2020  If your Photos library won't open, or if Photos behaves unexpectedly, the Photos library repair tool might resolve the issues. Follow these steps to use the Photos library repair tool: Hold down the Option and Command keys while you open Photos on your Mac. Aug 11, 2017 The Photos app will now attempt to repair your library, and display a bar to indicate its progress. This process can take a really long time depending on the number and size of the photos in your library, so be patient and let it finish. Once the repair process is complete, you’ll be dropped back into your Photos library. If so, you can continue to use iPhoto but it has some restrictions on the versions you can use, and you have to reinstall the iPhoto app. How to reinstall iPhoto app on Mac El Capitan. If you are not a fan of the new Photos app, Ross McKillop from SimpleHelp has a step-by-step guide that shows you how to re-install iPhoto on OS X El Capitan.

The first is a problem where Photos will claim a system or hardware issue is blocking its ability to create a library. This means that either the source disk for the prior library, or the destination disk where Photos is creating the library is damaged. To overcome this, reboot your Mac into Recovery Mode (hold Command-R at startup when you hear the boot chimes) and then use Disk Utility to check for errors on every drive you have attached to your Mac:

  1. Select a drive in the sidebar.
  2. Press Command-A to select all drives and devices
  3. Go to the First Aid tab and click “Repair Disk”
While you can first verify the disks and then repair them, if there are no errors then this will be redundant, and if there are then you will likely need to repair them anyway.

If you are keeping the problematic library on a secondary disk, then attempt to copy it to another one (either external, or your internal drive), and then try importing your photos from it. To select the library, launch Photos with the Option key held down, and then choose your library from the new copied location.

Jan 12, 2020  Launch Terminal, located in /Applications/Utilities. Enter the following command at the Terminal prompt: Press Return. Once the command executes, you can quit Terminal. The Library folder will now be visible in the Finder. Should you ever wish to set the Library folder. Move library folder mac el capitan.

An alternative is to attempt a repair of the library using iPhoto or Aperture, which can be done by launching the program with both the Option and Command keys held. This will bring up the Library First Aid panel, where you can repair various aspects of the library. The repair of both permissions and the database are the more relevant options here.

Holding the Option and Command keys when launching iPhoto will bring up this window, allowing you to repair your current library before you import it into Photos.

A final issue when importing your library to Photos is that it may not have permissions to access the locations on your system for importing photos and then saving them to its new library, in which case Photos will issue a permissions-related error. To overcome this, first perform the previously mentioned routine to repair permissions on your iPhoto library, or optionally copy it to an external hard drive. Then select the drive and press Command-i to get info on it, followed by ensuring the box to ignore ownership on the volume is checked.

Next, be sure your photo library destination is properly owned by you. By default, Photos will create the new library in your home folder, so try the following routine to ensure the folder’s default structure is readable:

  1. Reboot your Mac into Recovery Mode
  2. Choose Terminal from the Utilities folder
  3. Type “resetpassword” in the Terminal and press Enter
  4. Select your drive in the tool that opens
  5. Select your username from the drop-down menu
  6. Click the button to reset home folder permissions and ACLs.
  7. Reboot your Mac normally and try again

Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library Hours

In addition to this approach, you can manually target the folder in which Photos is saving its new library, with the following procedure:

  1. Open the Terminal and type the following (do not press Enter yet):
  2. Drag the desired destination folder to the Terminal window (if you are unsure, then drag the Pictures folder in your home directory), then press Enter
  3. Now run the following two commands (you can copy and paste both lines from here)

Mac Photos Stuck On Closing The Library House

When finished, again attempt to open Pictures and migrate your library. You may need to hold the Option key when launching Photos, to manually select your iPhoto library to import.