I know i can just move the iPhoto Library to that drive and then point iPhoto at it, but i'd also like to rebuild it so that all of the originals are moved into the iPhoto library, basically returning it to a normal state with the 'copy photos to library.' Feature enabled. This should not have happened. Since this is happening for other people too - this is definitely a problem with the VMware Fusion installer and needs to be fixed. Also, since VMware installation is causing this issue - VMware should offer a solution to fix this issue so others can resolve this without having to restore from a backup. Nov 04, 2015 The Disk Utility app has long contained the ability to verify and repair disk permissions on a Mac, but in the latest versions of OS X this ability has been removed.That doesn’t mean you can’t verify permissions and repair permissions in OS X El Capitan 10.11 and later however, you just need to turn to the command line to do so. If your Apple Mail doesn't seem to be searchable and/or has become so slow it seems to hang your Mac - or even displays incorrect email content, then it's time you attacked the problem: it's time.
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I wish I knew about that when iPhoto pooped out on me a few weeks back. I thought it was strange considering I have less than 100 photos stored in the application. Anyway, I ended up removing the library file. iPhoto rebuilt the library on the next restart and it started working again. I'm glad there's a more elegant way of doing this.
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Gypsy <[email protected]>
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Gypsy <[email protected]>
robg comments that he's not sure when you would need to rebuild the library. The Apple forums are full of users who have 'lost photos'. Rebuilding the libary recatalogs them.
Note that changing a file name of a JPG file using the finder will make it 'invisible' to iPhoto. Changing the name back doesn't help. You must import the photo back into iPhoto. Loose enough photos this way and 'rebuild' option becomes quite attractive.
Note that changing a file name of a JPG file using the finder will make it 'invisible' to iPhoto. Changing the name back doesn't help. You must import the photo back into iPhoto. Loose enough photos this way and 'rebuild' option becomes quite attractive.
I wonder if iTunes has this feature? My library self-corrupted a while back (scattered tracks suddenly are marked as unknown/unavailable in the middle of sequences, although the files are still in place). (these are classical albums, nine piano trios in a folder for example, with two of them 'lost' by iTunes).
Hand-navigating to each folder for each 'lost' track is impossible til I reach retirement age some years hence.
It's all beta and I'm tired of it.
Hand-navigating to each folder for each 'lost' track is impossible til I reach retirement age some years hence.
It's all beta and I'm tired of it.
I rebuilt my library, having had a few problems with reimporting a backup I made.
It really messes with the ordering of photos, in a way that seems totally bizarre... so I'd advise anyone doing this to watch out. You may have a slightly screwy library, but rebuilding it may make it really screwy :-
If you want to go back to the old library, just go to your com.apple.iPhoto.plist file in ~/Library/Preferences/ and look for the line: which in my file is line 171, and delete the
_1
No wucking furries :-)
I rebuilt my library, having had a few problems with reimporting a backup I made.
It really messes with the ordering of photos, in a way that seems totally bizarre... so I'd advise anyone doing this to watch out. You may have a slightly screwy library, but rebuilding it may make it really screwy :-
If you want to go back to the old library, just go to your com.apple.iPhoto.plist file in ~/Library/Preferences/ and look for the line: which in my file is line 171, and delete the
_1
No wucking furries :-)
K0o bebuild a busted iPhoto library. I start by holding down SHIFT+OPTION as I launch iPhoto. Everything moves along fine while it loads maybe 10-15 pics that have the default name they were given on my camera - such a PC1200012.jpg. Then the hole process just stalls when it comes to a pic that I've named - such as ses3.JPG.
It just stalls the whole iPhoto library rebuilding process. Would anyone have a clue what's up here? Thanks!
Also ever since my original iPhoto library crashed, every time I try to import from my camera, iPhoto says, 'No camera is selected'. My camera is hooked up fine and I can locate the pictures, copy and everything. just can't import into iPhoto.
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It just stalls the whole iPhoto library rebuilding process. Would anyone have a clue what's up here? Thanks!
Also ever since my original iPhoto library crashed, every time I try to import from my camera, iPhoto says, 'No camera is selected'. My camera is hooked up fine and I can locate the pictures, copy and everything. just can't import into iPhoto.
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Why would you need it?
Well you might have a desktop and a laptop Mac and your might have a program like FoldersSynchronizer and you might say to yourself, 'Self, it sure would be great to have the exact same iPhoto libraries on both Macs, wouldn't it?' and you might think that FoldersSynchronizer would be a good way of doing so.
Of course, I'd never try that with my data...
... I did it with a friend's.
Pulling all the originals out of those 'dated' folders (thank goodness they were there, even if iPhoto didn't see them), trashing everything else and then re-importing them (wow! iPhoto must have used the EXIF data and not just dated them by the day you imported them ... DOH!) was a real pain-in-the-but-tocks.
Or you might just be plain stupid and try the syncing yourself, ignoring a warning dialog ('There is a Folder blah blah blah'), and suddenly the Library info is gone.
Of course something stupid like that would NEVER happen to me!
Thanks for this great tip! It really helped, and is better and faster than just importing the pictures from a backup!
Alex
Of course something stupid like that would NEVER happen to me!
Thanks for this great tip! It really helped, and is better and faster than just importing the pictures from a backup!
Alex
My library currently has 4100 photos and about 500 rolls, dating back to 1998. Doing the rebuild speeded up things dramatically on my Cube. But, the renumbering of the rolls makes rebuilding the library inacceptable for me. Just can't find anything any more. I wish there were a trick to maintain or reconstruct the roll information.
Mac Os Needs To Rebuild The Library Pdf
If you give each roll a name, it will retain that name after the rebuild.
HMM
Just upgraded to iLife 5.0.1 and wanted to have my thumbnails (Library) rebuild since some of the thumbnails are looking a lot worse than others - even though they're all shot with the same Nikon D100 at the same settings.
Anyways it seems that the shortcut to invoke the Library rebuilding is CMD-OPT - not the before mentioned SHIFT-OPT.
The latter - or just SHIFT - gives you they upportunity to create a new album or choose another preexisting album.
Anyways I'll hit the 'Rebuild Library' button now and see how long time it takes to have 2.300 6 megapixel images rebuilded on my old TiBook ;-)
Just upgraded to iLife 5.0.1 and wanted to have my thumbnails (Library) rebuild since some of the thumbnails are looking a lot worse than others - even though they're all shot with the same Nikon D100 at the same settings.
Anyways it seems that the shortcut to invoke the Library rebuilding is CMD-OPT - not the before mentioned SHIFT-OPT.
The latter - or just SHIFT - gives you they upportunity to create a new album or choose another preexisting album.
Anyways I'll hit the 'Rebuild Library' button now and see how long time it takes to have 2.300 6 megapixel images rebuilded on my old TiBook ;-)
Hmm - the thumbnail-files are NOT rebuild, I wonder how you can acheive that WITHOUT having to re-import all the images
BINGO - with iPhoto 5.0.2 you now get four different items to choose from when you hold CMD-OPT down during the launch of iPhoto - one of them being 'Rebuild Thumbnails'.
It took a whole hour (with 100% CPU-load) for my 867 MHz TiBook to rebuild everything (2.700 six megapixel Nikon D100 shots) - but it was definately worth the wait since my bad looking thumbnail-problem is SOLVED now.
I guess someone should rewrite the hint, anyways - now it's in a comment ;-)
PS.: I guess it (still) helps to tell Apple what features/bugs you find (I did :-)
It took a whole hour (with 100% CPU-load) for my 867 MHz TiBook to rebuild everything (2.700 six megapixel Nikon D100 shots) - but it was definately worth the wait since my bad looking thumbnail-problem is SOLVED now.
I guess someone should rewrite the hint, anyways - now it's in a comment ;-)
PS.: I guess it (still) helps to tell Apple what features/bugs you find (I did :-)
...And in iLife '06 the rebuild modifier keys are <command><option><shift>.
I have a question related to this hint.
I ran out of space on my powerbook, and started burning pictures off to DVD before importing them, with the 'copy files to library...' feature turned off. This created a bad situation where iPhoto gets stuck looking for files that it can't find because their volumes aren't mounted. For image files, this only happens when you select them to do something with them, but apparently there's a bug in iPhoto in which if you have a movie file on an unmounted disc, it immediately looks for it at startup of iPhoto and hangs up with the Spinning Beach Ball of Death unless you have the volume available. So my iPhoto has become essentially unusable.
So, i took an old 120GB drive out of my old G4 tower, wiped it, and have repurposed it as a photos-only drive. I know i can just move the iPhoto Library to that drive and then point iPhoto at it, but i'd also like to rebuild it so that all of the originals are moved into the iPhoto library, basically returning it to a normal state with the 'copy photos to library...' feature enabled.
Another way to put it that I think makes sense is this: I want to perform a function that does the same thing as iTunes' 'Consolidate Library' command. This command in iTunes takes all of your dispersed music files and puts them in the correct place in the iTunes Music Library folder. That's what I want to happen with iPhoto - take the files that aren't in the iPhoto Library folder and move them into their correct location in there.
Is there a way to use the Rebuild Library function to do this? Has anyone experienced this before?
Thanks
Max
I ran out of space on my powerbook, and started burning pictures off to DVD before importing them, with the 'copy files to library...' feature turned off. This created a bad situation where iPhoto gets stuck looking for files that it can't find because their volumes aren't mounted. For image files, this only happens when you select them to do something with them, but apparently there's a bug in iPhoto in which if you have a movie file on an unmounted disc, it immediately looks for it at startup of iPhoto and hangs up with the Spinning Beach Ball of Death unless you have the volume available. So my iPhoto has become essentially unusable.
So, i took an old 120GB drive out of my old G4 tower, wiped it, and have repurposed it as a photos-only drive. I know i can just move the iPhoto Library to that drive and then point iPhoto at it, but i'd also like to rebuild it so that all of the originals are moved into the iPhoto library, basically returning it to a normal state with the 'copy photos to library...' feature enabled.
Another way to put it that I think makes sense is this: I want to perform a function that does the same thing as iTunes' 'Consolidate Library' command. This command in iTunes takes all of your dispersed music files and puts them in the correct place in the iTunes Music Library folder. That's what I want to happen with iPhoto - take the files that aren't in the iPhoto Library folder and move them into their correct location in there.
Is there a way to use the Rebuild Library function to do this? Has anyone experienced this before?
Thanks
Max
This is a documented undocumented procedure.
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107947
http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107947
Current Documentation: Rebuild the iPhoto Library
- 1. Mac Files Tips
- 2. Mac Software
- 3. Mac Storage Tips
- 4. Mac Troubleshooting
- 5. Mac OS
“Library is not working in photos in macOS Catalina. Recently I updated to macOS Catalina but after the update, photos are not working. I am getting library could not be opened error. How can I recover from it?” – From Apple Discussion.
The library not working is one of the most famous macOS issues. So, the users have faced it numerous times and it mostly occurs after an update. Although it is a well-known error, when this error occurs, there are also several associated issues like;
- the library could not be opened
- Photos app crashes on launch in Catalina
- photos are missing after Cataina
- updating library is not working in photos
So, this needs to get fixed immediately in order to enjoy the much-awaited advanced features of macOS Catalina. Just read the article below and you will get your answers.
- Part 1: Fix Library is Not Working in Photos in macOS Catalina
Part 1: Fix Library is Not Working in Photos in macOS Catalina
There are multiple ways to fix photos library could not be opened. These procedures are effective. So, follow the details provided below, carefully.
Solution 1: Use Mac Built-in Photos Library Repair Tool
If Mac photos the library could not be opened or it is showing unexpected errors, then Photos Library Repair Tool is one of the best ways to fix it. This is a built-in repair tool, comes with macOS and it is pretty easy to use.
Step 1: Press and hold the “Option” and “Command” keys while photos are opened on your Mac.
Step 2: Then, a dialog box will appear, click on “Repair” to proceed.
You will be asked to provide a password for your user account. The tool will analyze the library database at the beginning. Depending on the size of the library, the repair could take a while.
Solution 2: Update Photos App If It is Not Up to Date
It is possible that Photos app on your Mac has not been updated in a while. As you have just updated to Catalina, the latest version of macOS. It is possible that macOS Catalina is interfering with the older version of Photos app.
So, if you just update the Photos app to its latest version, the issue may get fixed.
Solution 3: Force Quit Photos then Re-launch to Fix Library is Not Working in Photos in macOS Catalina
It is also possible that you are facing a temporary glitch with the app. So, force-quit the Photos app and launch it again.
Possibly the library issue may get fixed.
Solution 4: Disable Autoplay Videos Setting in Photos
![Mac Os Needs To Rebuild The Library Mac Os Needs To Rebuild The Library](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125696458/928868655.jpg)
This is a very simple fix. Here’s how to do it;
Step 1: Click Launchpad from your mac desktop and open Photos app.
Step 2: Go to Photos > Preferences and you will find the option Autoplay Videos and Live Photos.
Now, simply uncheck the feature.
Solution 5: Reinstall macOS Catalina to Fix Library is Not Working in Photos in macOS Catalina
You should also try re-installing macOS Catalina if the error still hasn’t disappeared. But the proper way to re-install macOS Catalina is to use Mac’s Recovery Mode. Here’s how to repair photo library Mac:
Step 1: So, restart your Mac. While the device is starting, you need to hold “Command and R” keys together in order to enter Recovery Mode.
Step 2: As the follow-up window appears, click on “Reinstall macOS”. Then, click on “Continue”.
Step 3: Then, you have to agree to “Terms & Conditions”.
Step 4: Finally, select the drive where you want to install macOS Catalina and click “Install”.
Part 2: What If Your Photos are Lost after Fixing Library is Not Working in Photos in macOS Catalina
There is a possibility that photos from your photo library may get erased even after fixing the library. If that happens, you need to make a photo recovery Mac.
Although, the discussed solutions for the library fix are very effective but so many changes were made on the Mac system that lost photos are a possibility. Now, in order to recover lost photo on Mac, an effective data recovery program is required and it needs to be used immediately. As the longer you wait, the chances of photo recovery gets slimmer.
So, stop using the Mac and use Tenorshare UltData-Mac Data Recovery. UltData is a great software developed by Tenorshare, provides effective data recovery with precision and software is quite secure as well. Here are a few important features of the software:
- UltData is capable of recovery of any sort of lost files on Mac.
- May it be a deleted file of lost due to format, UltData will make the recovery anyway.
- Files can be restored from internal hard drive, as well as external drives.
- The data recovery rate is 100%.
- The program is also safe to use and very secure.
Now, the recovery of those lost photos will be very easy with UltData. Just follow the steps below:
Step 1: Download and install Tenorshare UltData for Mac on your computer and launch it.
Step 2: Choose the location of the lost photos and click “Scan” to proceed.
Step 3: It will take a while to complete the scan but upon its completion, the scan results will get displayed on the screen. You can click on them to preview the details.
Step 4: The lost files will be among the results. Just choose them and click “Recover” to restore them successfully.
You also have to choose a path where the restored photos will be located. Don’t choose the same location from they were originally, erased. Doing it will cause permanent data loss.
Part 3: Some New Features of Photos in macOS Catalina You Need to Know
The macOS Catalina is the newest addition to the macOS line up. It is brand new, better, faster and equipped with some amazing new features. Let’s have a look.
Photos View
All your photos and videos will be displayed on a grid. This is the new Photos View. You will be able to zoom in and get a larger view and additional details. The photos on the grid will be visible in a square format.
Live Photos and Videos
Live videos and photos are also included in the photo library. You just have to click “Auto-Play” when they are visible on the screen. It uses a dynamic display system.
Memory Movies
You will be able to view memory movies that you created on your iOS device. So, finally, memory movies came to Mac.
Machine Learning
Machine learning is included. It helps to realize the photos app, who is in the photo and what is going on. This helps users in many ways.
Conclusion
Hence, you will be able to repair photo library Mac and it will be easier if you just follow the detailed solution mentioned in the article, above. But as mentioned before, it is possible that you may lose some of your stored images from the library while fixing it. If it happens, you need to stop using the Mac immediately and use Tenorshare UltData for the fast and successful recovery of those photos.