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Mds_stores process memory leak with MacOS Sequoia

Hi, yesterday evening I updated my Mac to macOS sequoia 15.1.1. Since then my computer started to use an insane amount of ram for the indexing process of spotlight. Rebooting, turning off the pc or even killing the process doesn't seem to work.

The process always starts with few ram, and reaches up to 90GB allocated in a copule of hours. Then the OS kills the process, and after a while it restarts from zero.

Is there a solution for this?


[Re-Titled by Moderator]

MacBook Pro (M2 Pro, 2023)

Posted on Nov 20, 2024 12:50 PM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Nov 20, 2024 1:00 PM

Nico_0 wrote:

Hi, yesterday evening I updated my Mac to macOS sequoia 15.1.1. Since then my computer started to use an insane amount of ram for the indexing process of spotlight. Rebooting, turning off the pc or even killing the process doesn't seem to work.
The process always starts with few ram, and reaches up to 90GB allocated in a copule of hours. Then the OS kills the process, and after a while it restarts from zero.
Is there a solution for this?
https://discussions.apple.com/content/attachment/08859feb-8cfc-4d4e-a2d9-59177183e636


Have you shut down and restarted more than once since your update...


if so you can try Logging out and back in again...

>Log out


no resolve—

try SafeBoot to sort anomalies Start up your Mac in safe mode - Apple Support

Login and test. Reboot as normal and test. Caches get rebuilt automatically.



ref: macOS 15.1.1


7 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Nov 20, 2024 1:00 PM in response to Nico_0

Nico_0 wrote:

Hi, yesterday evening I updated my Mac to macOS sequoia 15.1.1. Since then my computer started to use an insane amount of ram for the indexing process of spotlight. Rebooting, turning off the pc or even killing the process doesn't seem to work.
The process always starts with few ram, and reaches up to 90GB allocated in a copule of hours. Then the OS kills the process, and after a while it restarts from zero.
Is there a solution for this?
https://discussions.apple.com/content/attachment/08859feb-8cfc-4d4e-a2d9-59177183e636


Have you shut down and restarted more than once since your update...


if so you can try Logging out and back in again...

>Log out


no resolve—

try SafeBoot to sort anomalies Start up your Mac in safe mode - Apple Support

Login and test. Reboot as normal and test. Caches get rebuilt automatically.



ref: macOS 15.1.1


Nov 20, 2024 1:00 PM in response to Nico_0

Typically, after updating or upgrading macOS, there are a number of background process that will take place, including MDS. These should "settle down" within a few hours and things should return to "normal" going forward.


If macOS is "killing" the process, it is due to protecting the Mac's CPU from overheating. Once cooled, the process will continue until completed ... or unless you stop it.


In case you are not familiar with MDS, it relates to the Spotlight app on your Mac. With a new update, Spotlight needs to re-index and this is what is causing MDS to run "full speed."

Nov 21, 2024 2:30 AM in response to Nico_0

If still need be…


Open Terminal and run each of these one at a time


/System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Versions/A/Support/lsregister -kill -r -domain local -domain system -domain user


sudo will ask you for an Admin password that won't be echoed.

Carefully type your admin password when asked & hit enter.


sudo /System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Support/lsregister -kill -seed -lint -r -f -v -dump -domain local -domain system -domain user -domain network


killall Dock


sudo mdutil -E /


sudo mdutil -i on /


Rebuilding a drive index can take a long time, so be prepared to wait whether you do it through the System Preference panel or the command line.

Mds_stores process memory leak with MacOS Sequoia

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