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Macbook pro will not boot

MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) Quad-Core i7

Model Identifier: MacBookPro8,2

OS: El Capitan (I think)

Issue: it won't boot up. Hitting the power button the Apple logo appears and the bong sound then a bar appears under the apple which takes about a minute to get to the right, then the screen goes blank white for one sec, then a shade darker (v light grey), then it either freezes like that or reboots after a few seconds.


The only boot commands that work are :


T which after an extended test says no hardware issues.


V looks ok right upto boot time then I get the white screen again. Errors: "Applekeystore: operation failed..." "unexpected session: 100000..." "LibBootcache: unae to open /var/db/bootcache.playlist" "Bash: /etc/rc.server no such file or directory"


R brings up internet recovery which ticks along and again I then get the white screen.


R with bootable USB containing macOS on gets as far as clicking the macOS installer disk, the bar ticks along for a min then white screen.


S works and I can fsck the disk with no issue. I can go into my HD and see my files fine.

Ive tried resetting P&NVRAM, and SMC


Ive tried installing a new blank ssd which made no difference.


Any ideas before I throw it in the bin?! :)

Thanks a lot.

MacBook Pro

Posted on Oct 29, 2021 6:33 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 29, 2021 7:27 AM

g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e wrote:

MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) Quad-Core i7
Model Identifier: MacBookPro8,2
OS: El Capitan (I think)
Issue: it won't boot up. Hitting the power button the Apple logo appears and the bong sound then a bar appears under the apple which takes about a minute to get to the right, then the screen goes blank white for one sec, then a shade darker (v light grey), then it either freezes like that or reboots after a few seconds.

The only boot commands that work are :

T which after an extended test says no hardware issues.

V looks ok right upto boot time then I get the white screen again. Errors: "Applekeystore: operation failed..." "unexpected session: 100000..." "LibBootcache: unae to open /var/db/bootcache.playlist" "Bash: /etc/rc.server no such file or directory"

R brings up internet recovery which ticks along and again I then get the white screen.

R with bootable USB containing macOS on gets as far as clicking the macOS installer disk, the bar ticks along for a min then white screen.

S works and I can fsck the disk with no issue. I can go into my HD and see my files fine.
Ive tried resetting P&NVRAM, and SMC

Ive tried installing a new blank ssd which made no difference.

Any ideas before I throw it in the bin?! :)
Thanks a lot.



If your Mac doesn't start up all the way

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204156

Similar questions

8 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Oct 29, 2021 7:27 AM in response to g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e

g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e wrote:

MacBook Pro (15-inch, Early 2011) Quad-Core i7
Model Identifier: MacBookPro8,2
OS: El Capitan (I think)
Issue: it won't boot up. Hitting the power button the Apple logo appears and the bong sound then a bar appears under the apple which takes about a minute to get to the right, then the screen goes blank white for one sec, then a shade darker (v light grey), then it either freezes like that or reboots after a few seconds.

The only boot commands that work are :

T which after an extended test says no hardware issues.

V looks ok right upto boot time then I get the white screen again. Errors: "Applekeystore: operation failed..." "unexpected session: 100000..." "LibBootcache: unae to open /var/db/bootcache.playlist" "Bash: /etc/rc.server no such file or directory"

R brings up internet recovery which ticks along and again I then get the white screen.

R with bootable USB containing macOS on gets as far as clicking the macOS installer disk, the bar ticks along for a min then white screen.

S works and I can fsck the disk with no issue. I can go into my HD and see my files fine.
Ive tried resetting P&NVRAM, and SMC

Ive tried installing a new blank ssd which made no difference.

Any ideas before I throw it in the bin?! :)
Thanks a lot.



If your Mac doesn't start up all the way

https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204156

Oct 29, 2021 7:52 AM in response to g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e

g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e wrote:

Thanks Leroy, i have read that page already, it suggests i "use Disk Utility to repair your startup disk." But i cannot get to Disk Utility. I have removed all devices etc.

Any other ideas?


DiskUtility can be found—

Recovery

Internet Recovery

Boot clone

Bootable USBinstaller

Time Machine Back up —(Option key on boot)




Recovery (both M1 and Intel) — https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204904


https://support.apple.com/guide/mac-help/use-macos-recovery-on-an-intel-based-mac-mchl338cf9a8/mac

Oct 29, 2021 10:01 AM in response to g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e

Based on your symptoms and the model MacBook Pro, you likely have a failed Discrete graphics processor.


If you need to support an external display, or put your Mac to sleep, that computer is dead to you, and needs to be replaced. There are no affordable used parts available.


If you would be willing to "fiddle with it" there are some hobbyist hacks that MIGHT be able to be pressed into service to disable the Discrete graphics processor and continue to run the the Integrated graphics processor only. Disclaimer: May damage your Mac, not supported by Apple.


Oct 29, 2021 12:50 PM in response to g_r_e_g_o_i_r_e

There are multiple paths you could take. Here is my collection or work-arounds. These will disable Discrete graphics, and in many cases mean you can no longer use an external display AND can NOT allow your MacBook Pro to sleep -- or it will crash on wake.


Read everything before you do anything.


Install gfxCardStatus (https://gfx.io) and set it to "i" (integrated graphics only). It will allow your MBP to run on integrated graphics only, bypassing the discrete GPU which has the issues. This may allow your MBP to run normally, although it will have reduced graphics performance when permforming demanding graphics tasks. The alternative is replacing the logic board, which is not cost effective on a machine that old, unless gfx does not resolve the issue and you really want to keep this MBP.


There is an acknowledged bug in the current version of Cody Kreiger's Open-Source gfxcardstatus, and the developer has confessed he does not have time to fix it right now.


There is a fork off the main build by steveschow available that seems to fix that problem for current versions of MacOS such as ElCapitan and Sierra. He provides a finished .app for direct download -- you do not have to compile anything.

https://github.com/steveschow/gfxCardStatus/releases


Also note that if your Mac does not run long enough to allow gfxcardstatus to be added, this is not really practical.


In addition, Steve Schow writes that he has abandoned further development -- because there are better solutions available [for both the 2010 model and 2011 models].


2010 model:

I have discontinued use of gfxCardStatus to solve the MBP kernel panic problem as the issue is better solved on 2010 models with the nVidia GPU by the following hack:

https://github.com/julian-poidevin/MBPMid2010_GPUFix.


2011 model:

the use of ArchLinux bootable CD to gain access to and re-write the EFI on the drive, and permanently disable the discrete graphics chip. This page and scroll down past the list to the blog:


http://github.com/steveschow/gfxCardStatus


There are two similar procedure listed. I used the second from MacRumors as it seemed easier. I have made the Arch Linux bootable CD on another Mac, and tried this approach. I now have a perfectly-functioning MacBook Pro late 2011 15-in model with Discrete Graphics disabled. Runs just fine. But NO external display support any more.



--------

There is a completely different hack developed more recently. It requires only single-User mode to get started, then type a complicated string into NVRAM, then disable System Integrity Protection and run an additional little program (direct-download link provided there) to make the change semi-permanent.


http://dosdude1.com/gpudisable/


.or a similar procedure with a bit more manual work:

Power up and boot into Single User Recovery by holding

if you are on high sierra 10.13.6+ you might need to use Command + r instead

Command + r + s


Disable SIP (This takes a bit to complete so wait for it)

csrutil disable


Disable Discrete GPU on boot by running

nvram fa4ce28d-b62f-4c99-9cc3-6815686e30f9:gpu-power-prefs=%01%00%00%00


Enable verbose boot mode (This will show text everytime you boot up, shutdown or restart your mac)

nvram boot-args="-v"


Reboot

reboot


Boot into Single User-mode by holding

Command + s + r

It might look as if it hanged, but press enter and you should see the shell (root#)


Mount root partition writeable

/sbin/mount -uw /


Make a kext-backup directory

mkdir -p /System/Library/Extensions-off


Move ONLY ONE offending kext out of the way

mv /System/Library/Extensions/AMDRadeonX3000.kext /System/Library/Extensions-off/


Inform the system to update its kextcache:

touch /System/Library/Extensions/


Reboot

reboot

It will show a bunch of text in the screen (don't be alarmed, let it finish) and then it will restart again In second restart it will show text in the screen again and then it will show normal login screen Your computer now should work properly (dGPU off and iGPU on.


Macbook pro will not boot

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