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Participant
December 8, 2017
Answered

Flash CS6 Crashes Upon Import

  • December 8, 2017
  • 11 replies
  • 8196 views

It does not matter what I'm trying to import, Flash keeps on crashing. It doesn't matter if I drag and drop or use Command R (MAC) or select import from the drop down menu, a progress bar appears and then Flash crashes. I've searched and have yet to find a solution.

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer PolkaPower

We are running into the same issue. I think it has something to do with Apple's new file system APFS. Our solution is to repartition the drive and add a Mac OS Extended partition and copy the Flash CS6 directory to it and run it from there.

Hope this solves your issue.

11 replies

Participant
June 5, 2019

I found a solution that works. I partitioned my Mac OS APFS file system so that I can have another partition with Mac OS Extended Journal. Once that was done I copied the Flash CS6 application over to the new partition. I can now import successfully.

Participant
August 23, 2021

How Do I do That

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
August 24, 2021

If you're asking how to make a partition, that need not be straightforward, and could in some cases involve wiping your drive.

What you could do instead is connect an external drive, and use Disk Utility to make it be HFS+ or Mac OS Extended. Then copy the Flash Pro CS6 folder onto that drive, and run Flash from inside the folder. You could delete the copy of Flash Pro CS6 on the APFS drive, to make sure you don't accidentally launch it from that drive.

Participant
February 9, 2019

Hi,

this problem just suddenly occurred in Flash while I'd been working on illustrations done over photos for a technical book. So I found a quick temporary solution: open some file with imported photo from before, duplicate a photo in library, and then edit in Photoshop.

There you can do whatever. It is a pain in the butt this issue. I can't get it fixed.

Zap Zapatos
Participant
June 19, 2018

I have tried running Flash Pro CS6 on external hard drive, but the issue when importing persists. My external HD is formatted exFat. Does the solution only work with HFS+ formatted storage?

Participant
March 17, 2018

Can you offer any help as how to do this?

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
March 17, 2018

Not sure who you are asking how to do what. But if you're asking me about using Flash Pro CS6 on an external drive:

Connect an external drive. Make sure that it hasn't been formatted for APFS (it's highly likely it won't be).

Drag your internal drive Applications/Adobe Flash CS6 folder to the connected external drive.

Open Adobe Flash CS6 from inside the folder on the external drive.

Participant
December 19, 2018

Just adding to this... I was having the same problem of Flash CS6 crashing everytime I tried to import anything after updating to Mojave.

The trick of dragging the Flash CS6 application folder on to an external hard-drive and running it from there worked for me! Thanks for the suggestion!

Fingers crossed for a patch from either Apple or Adobe so we don't have to do this workaround, but I'm not holding out too much hope. :-/

nadiak99913552
Participant
March 14, 2018

I didn't get it?

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
February 23, 2018

I got around to doing a test of Flash Pro CS6 on an external drive, that is Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and not APFS. I dragged the folder from Applications on my internal APFS drive, to a folder on the drive I use for Time Machine. When I opened that version I was given a message about it having to update the configuration files, which I let it do. Everything works ok, and there is no crash when doing an import.

It's a work around to the issue, but an easier work around than if you had to wipe your internal drive and reformat it to not be APFS.

It's the same solution PolkaPower gave, but without having to repartition your internal drive.

java lang
Participant
July 9, 2018

I would like to add that I found an external USB hard drive, which was formatted for Windows, and after going into Utilities - Disk Utility, and formatting it as MacOS Extended Journaled, and dragging the Applications/Adobe Flash CS 6 folder into it, and simply running it, works! I can import now without continuous crashes. Thank you for your help, it has really saved what would have been an impossibly old project from dieing forever.

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
July 9, 2018

Thanks for reporting that. I hadn't tried exFat, so maybe being a Mac format is important.

PolkaPowerCorrect answer
Participant
January 15, 2018

We are running into the same issue. I think it has something to do with Apple's new file system APFS. Our solution is to repartition the drive and add a Mac OS Extended partition and copy the Flash CS6 directory to it and run it from there.

Hope this solves your issue.

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
January 15, 2018

I did some testing. Importing into CS3 works fine, but even invoking the the import to stage or import to library crashes CS6.

A significant change between CS3 and CS6 was that with CS3 I believe that all importers were initialized when you opened CS3. As a way to speed up launching, the importers for CS6 were only initialized when you first did an import. After all, a lot of Flash Pro sessions don't require importing, and so why make people wait for importers in the sessions they're not going to need them.

Reseting the CS6 preferences introduces a new problem, where you get a message saying you may need to reinstall. I did an uninstall and a reinstall. When that finishes I'll post an update!

Colin Holgate
Inspiring
January 15, 2018

The reinstall did fix the problem introduced by deleting preferences, but still it crashes with Command-R.

I don't know for sure if it's High Sierra or APFS in particular. I'm on both of those, and can't easily test HFS+. PolkaPower found that to be good work around, so I think I will mark that as Correct for now.

Preran happy birthday, and can I send you crash logs for someone to look at? It seems like it's a Java related problem, and ought to be fixable.

Participant
January 10, 2018

This happenes for me as well. I have just started learning Flash, but can't make what I want to do when I can't import any files. Hopefully Apple can launch an update to their operation system where this is sorted

Preran
Community Manager
Community Manager
January 12, 2018

If anyone here has a computer with a previous version of the OS installed, can they let us know if Flash Pro is working as intended on that computer?

Thanks,

Preran

bls1999
Participant
December 27, 2017

I am also having this issue on macOSX High Sierra, CS6.  Any kind of file that I'm trying to import will automatically crash the program.  I have tried resetting my preferences and it doesn't work.

Patrick Frentz
Participant
December 20, 2017

Out of curiosity, are you using the High Sierra OS (newest as of Dec 2017)? I haven't had to import any files for a while now, but now it crashes. The only thing I can think that changed is my OS, but I'm not even sure if that was before or after the last time I successfully imported something. I need help! Rival programs are $400 and I'd rather keep Flash!