Last few weeks, I have been getting a warning dialog stating that "Finder can't quit..." because some iOS action is in progress. Force Quit shows nothing open except Finder. Relaunching Finder is of no help; still can't shutdown the Mac. I end up having to use the "nuclear" method: hold the power button until all the monitor light leaks out!
Of course, there is no automagic restart in the morning because of the non-standard shutdown.
There is an iPhone and an iPad in the "Locations" area of the Finder Sidebar. The eject button is replaced by the spinning arrow. "OK, the iPhone is the 'iOS' piece of the puzzle; but what is the process and why is it running?" Disconnecting the usb cable and even shutting down the iPhone changes the inability to shut down the Mac.
I've found the following "solutions" that I will try the next time this happens. Now, all I need is a way to remember what I'm not supposed to forget!
MacReportsOpen
Activity Monitor on your Mac (Applications > Utilities).
Search for AMPDevicesAgent. It may also help to sort the % column
Two (to four) processes should appear, a process and a helper agent pair. Highlight all of them and select the X on the far left top of that window. Then select Force Quit. Wait a moment. You may have to do do this once more.
If this problem occurs again, try starting your Mac in
Safe Mode. This may fix your problem. Here is how:
• Shut down your computer.
• Press the power button and immediately press and hold the Shift key.
• Release the Shift key when you see the login screen.
• Login (you may have to log in more than once).
• Now your computer is in Safe Mode.
• Test to see if your problem repeats in Safe Mode too.
• Regardless of the result, restart your Mac normally, without pressing the Shift key.
HowToGeek:
•
Safe Boot: With the Mac
shutdown, hold down the shift key and press the power button. Hold the shift key down until you see the Log In screen. Now perform your favorite maintenance tasks.
•
Reset SMC and/or
PRAM/NVRAM:
1. With the Mac *shutdown*
2. Press the power button and immediately press and hold down the option + command + P + R keys.
3. The resetting routine may take as long as 20 seconds.
4. After that time, release the keys and the Mac will startup normally.
If you'd like to try some
Terminal tasks you are welcome to read ths "Reader Rick" suggestions at
AppleToolBox. I have not tried those specific commands/steps.