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jafico1

macrumors member
Original poster
Jul 7, 2018
95
30
Maine
As the title says, my 2018 MacBook Pro 15" seems to have a bit of a problem with OneDrive syncing, with it being a massive battery hog. It doesn't seem to be slowing down the Mac at all. Initially, I thought it was just due to the fact it was syncing the files from the OneDrive server, but I've left it for two weeks and it still seems to be destroying the battery life. Here is a screenshot:
upload_2018-8-31_11-44-36.png


Does anyone know how I may mitigate this issue? I do know that OneDrive was a massive battery/CPU hog on my previous XPS 15, but it's even more painful on this machine as without OneDrive, the battery life is amazing (with typical college work I get around 9 hours).
 

chabig

macrumors G4
Sep 6, 2002
11,258
8,955
Search the internet for "Onedrive battery drain" and you'll get lots of results both on Mac and Windows. Apparently it's a very inefficient app. In that case, your only options are to live with it, don't use it, or use it sporadically.
 
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casperes1996

macrumors 604
Jan 26, 2014
7,420
5,534
Horsens, Denmark
It's such a shame as OneDrive is by far the best value online storage solution out there (with Office 365 included), as I share it with other family members. Does anyone have any recommendations for any OneDrive alternatives?


Well, I'm sure you know all the options.

Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, iCloud Drive, Creative Cloud. - I personally use iCloud Drive mostly, and Google Drive a little.

A separate option would be setting up your own service on a home server.
 

jerryk

macrumors 604
Nov 3, 2011
7,418
4,206
SF Bay Area
Is there a way to start and stop OneDrive manually on a Mac?

Under windows I do not have Onedrive start automatically as part of the boot. Instead I start it when I need to sync and then terminate it when the syncing is done.
 
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Cusa

macrumors newbie
Nov 9, 2007
21
27
The Union
Is there a way to start and stop OneDrive manually on a Mac?

Under windows I do not have Onedrive start automatically as part of the boot. Instead I start it when I need to sync and then terminate it when the syncing is done.
Just clic the OneDrive icon, clic on "More", clic on "Preferences", then uncheck "Open at login".. From there if you want to manually start it, just clic the icon. I use it all the time and I have not problems whatsoever.
 

jerryk

macrumors 604
Nov 3, 2011
7,418
4,206
SF Bay Area
Just clic the OneDrive icon, clic on "More", clic on "Preferences", then uncheck "Open at login".. From there if you want to manually start it, just clic the icon. I use it all the time and I have not problems whatsoever.

Great. That is exactly how it is in Windows.
 

BigMcGuire

Cancelled
Jan 10, 2012
9,832
14,025
Hah funny, my 2017 MBP 13' ---- I just moved to Dropbox because of this very issue. It caught me unaware one time when I needed my battery BAD and didn't have access to a plug... Wondering why CoconutBattery was telling me I had 2 hours left... OneDrive was using 100% CPU. You're right, doesn't slow down the MBP at all, had I not looked at the CoconutBattery timer, I'd have never known.

What's weird is I only catch this happening on battery ... never plugged in. Annoying. Well, last time it's done it for me cuz I've moved to Dropbox.

Edit: Killing OneDrive and restarting it fixes the 100% cpu issue temporarily. But it comes back randomly and it's hard to catch cuz the system doesn't slow down.
 
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Howard2k

macrumors 603
Mar 10, 2016
5,228
5,056
Hah funny, my 2017 MBP 13' ---- I just moved to Dropbox because of this very issue. It caught me unaware one time when I needed my battery BAD and didn't have access to a plug... Wondering why CoconutBattery was telling me I had 2 hours left... OneDrive was using 100% CPU. You're right, doesn't slow down the MBP at all, had I not looked at the CoconutBattery timer, I'd have never known.

What's weird is I only catch this happening on battery ... never plugged in. Annoying. Well, last time it's done it for me cuz I've moved to Dropbox.

Edit: Killing OneDrive and restarting it fixes the 100% cpu issue temporarily. But it comes back randomly and it's hard to catch cuz the system doesn't slow down.

You can run Activity Monitor as an icon showing CPU usage. It’ll minimize to your dock and it’ll be crystal clear when something is hammering your CPU.
 
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BigMcGuire

Cancelled
Jan 10, 2012
9,832
14,025
You can run Activity Monitor as an icon showing CPU usage. It’ll minimize to your dock and it’ll be crystal clear when something is hammering your CPU.

Thank you. I did not know this. Right clicking the icon on the bar at the bottom and choosing: Dock Icon - CPU Usage. Very cool!
 
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Cusa

macrumors newbie
Nov 9, 2007
21
27
The Union
Hah funny, my 2017 MBP 13' ---- I just moved to Dropbox because of this very issue. It caught me unaware one time when I needed my battery BAD and didn't have access to a plug... Wondering why CoconutBattery was telling me I had 2 hours left... OneDrive was using 100% CPU. You're right, doesn't slow down the MBP at all, had I not looked at the CoconutBattery timer, I'd have never known.

What's weird is I only catch this happening on battery ... never plugged in. Annoying. Well, last time it's done it for me cuz I've moved to Dropbox.

Edit: Killing OneDrive and restarting it fixes the 100% cpu issue temporarily. But it comes back randomly and it's hard to catch cuz the system doesn't slow down.
hmm Interesting.. I will check OneDrive while running on battery. I rarely have my MBP unplugged while working.
 

cbautis2

macrumors 6502a
Aug 17, 2013
894
1,106
Windows software works best with Windows of course and Apple software of course you guessed it.
 

jafico1

macrumors member
Original poster
Jul 7, 2018
95
30
Maine
Windows software works best with Windows of course and Apple software of course you guessed it.
That would be the case normally, except Microsoft decided to ruin the OneDrive client in Windows 10 after the excellent 8.1 version - nowadays the situation on Windows is no better
 
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maflynn

macrumors Haswell
May 3, 2009
73,478
43,405
after the excellent 8.1 version
I had so much trouble with the 8.1 version. I do miss the ability to keep a file reference local but the actual files on the sever, yet in on windows 8.1, it was a nightmare. I've given up in both windows and macOS having a OneDrive client running. Since the offie apps are able to retrieve my files on OneDrive without the client I go that route.
 

smbu2000

macrumors 6502
Oct 19, 2014
464
217
Could be constant syncing? I’ve never used Onedrive but when I had the Dropbox app installed it would constantly be syncing files and drain the battery on my MBP. I eventually set auto sync off and it was better after that.
 

BigMcGuire

Cancelled
Jan 10, 2012
9,832
14,025
Could be constant syncing? I’ve never used Onedrive but when I had the Dropbox app installed it would constantly be syncing files and drain the battery on my MBP. I eventually set auto sync off and it was better after that.

It wasn't syncing for me when it was using all that CPU. Maybe indexing? Dunno. It's a bug in the last version or two cuz this didn't happen before - I've been using this for awhile too. :/ Oh well, Microsoft gets my $ anyway cuz of Office 365. They'll probably make more $ with me not using OneDrive storage. :p
 

fireedo

macrumors regular
Jun 9, 2011
133
58
Indonesia
no issue here, everything went normal on this mbp mid 2018
 

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mjyu51

macrumors newbie
Feb 26, 2018
23
1
I tested One Drive and Dropbox as I use both. If you have large amount of data (my dropbox has 90GB, but one drive has only <10GB), the first sync will take a long time and it will push the machine very hot.

The strange side is, the CPU usage is <15% for most of the time, but clock seems running at 4.0+GHz most of the time and package temperature most likely will be hitting 100C.

This is even worse if you use bootcamp and run windows.
 

verdi1987

macrumors 6502a
Jun 19, 2010
619
340
I have had this issue with OneDrive on both my 2018 MBP and 2015 iMac through several versions of OneDrive. I am currently on 18.192.0920.0013 (Fast Insiders). It has occurred while running macOS 10.14 and 10.14.1.

The first time I noticed it was after I discovered my MBP had died after being fully charged. I thought perhaps something was wrong with the hardware or it wasn't staying asleep, but then later that day I heard the MBP fans on full blast. OneDrive was pegging the CPU. I then also noticed the same problem on iMac. It has happened several times on both machines, usually after wake from sleep. While I can usually hear the MBP fans, on my iMac they are not as loud, so I only discover the issue if I check Activity Monitor.

I had Files-On-Demand enabled, so I'm going to disable that and see if that resolves it. The release notes for the OneDrive version I'm running indicates “Fixed an issue that caused high CPU usage on Mac,” but the CPU issue just happened to me this morning with this version.
 

vine-boating

macrumors 68000
Aug 10, 2017
1,755
459
Well, I'm sure you know all the options.

Dropbox, Google Drive, Box, iCloud Drive, Creative Cloud. - I personally use iCloud Drive mostly, and Google Drive a little.

A separate option would be setting up your own service on a home server.
I know that this is a late bump but how do you save documents on to iCloud Drive? For example saving a world document on my Mac computer to iCloud Drive?
 

casperes1996

macrumors 604
Jan 26, 2014
7,420
5,534
Horsens, Denmark
I know that this is a late bump but how do you save documents on to iCloud Drive? For example saving a world document on my Mac computer to iCloud Drive?

Well, if the location of the file is inside iCloud Drive, it gets saved to iCloud Drive. Whether you move it there or choose it as the initial save destination is irrelevant. You can set it up such that your Desktop and Documents folders are stored in iCloud too, such that anything in either of those two locations is synced to iCloud Drive. Each app will have a folder in iCloud Drive for easier sandboxing, but manual storage structures are of course supported.
 

vine-boating

macrumors 68000
Aug 10, 2017
1,755
459
Well, if the location of the file is inside iCloud Drive, it gets saved to iCloud Drive. Whether you move it there or choose it as the initial save destination is irrelevant. You can set it up such that your Desktop and Documents folders are stored in iCloud too, such that anything in either of those two locations is synced to iCloud Drive. Each app will have a folder in iCloud Drive for easier sandboxing, but manual storage structures are of course supported.

Thanks for the reply
If I am like at a university windows computer how would I access these files?
 
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