[OSX-Users] Re: Lion running like a drain

Jules Field sysjkf at ecs.soton.ac.uk
Wed Feb 1 18:59:12 GMT 2012



On 01/02/2012 18:47, Hugh Glaser wrote:
> Yeah, as I have reported earlier, I have the same problem, since installing Lion.
> It is not clear exactly why it grinds, but there are a few hints, some shown by menumeters
> Sometimes it thrashes paging, +1K for a looooong time.
> VM use goes up a lot. fseventsd increases VM continuously, while still only having a little real memory. Some other demon got to 2.2GB at the weekend, while only using c.70MB other day (I forget which) (as reported by Activity Monitor).
> One interesting thing is that MM reports that there are 0.0% cache hits - can't work out if it is just not measuring properly.
> Heavy network activity thrashes the CPU.
> Safari was crashing when it had been running for a while and repeatably when I then saved a page or clicked on the download progress button.
>
> But it is a pain - I have recently moved to using Skype on my old 1GB macMini (running Snow Leopard) that also runs VPN services, Freeview reception, and VLC display, because my 4GB PB17 doesn't manage to do Skype without sometimes stopping.
>
> I reformatted the disk, and then recovered from TM, in case that helped, but it made no difference.
> So I went through the more painful process of creating a completely new user, which I am now using.
> This has improved things a little, but not the VM problems; Safari no longer crashes, but Mail does, although very rarely.
Could the large swap size be partly due to your usual tendency to never 
quit any app but to let it grow and grow? I always quit apps when I've 
finished with them for now, and don't get this problem. Also how much 
RAM have you got? 6GB or 8GB makes Lion a lot happier.
> The next stage, if I care, would be to reformat and do a clean install, but I would need to pay for a new copy or get a hold of Snow Leopard disks to do that.
I've probably got a copy of the Snow Leopard discs you need. I have 
quite a collection of them.
> So I will be interested if you do manage to get improvement that way!
> Be careful - you really do need to be upgrading from Snow Leopard or have a paid for licence to the Apple Store for Lion before it will install on the bare metal.
I do bare installs of Lion all the time, no problem at all. Just bring 
your machine over. I have 10.7.0 and 10.7.2 on USB stick ready to 
install onto bare metal.

Jules.

> And you are right, it feels just like Windoze did in the old days, but a modern Windows system is better than this.
>
> Good luck!
>
> On 1 Feb 2012, at 13:28, Hugh C Davis wrote:
>
>> Folks, did we get any resolution from the issue that mc raised earlier.
>>
>> I have a McBook Pro 15 and a MacBook Air 11, both running essentially the same portfolio of software.
>>
>> Since installing Lion the macBook Pro has ground to a halt. It is displaying all the frustrating features that made me leave Windows. The MacBook Air still seems to be working OK. (Note that there is no sign of any problem with large CPU usage or network usage)
>>
>> I'm quite happy to reformat the damn thing and reinstall from scratch, but can anyone assure me that my effort will be rewarded?
>>
>> And how do I do this? I saw stuff about USB keys etc.
>>
>>
>>
>>

Jules

-- 
sysjkf at ecs.soton.ac.uk



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