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Known Participant
October 26, 2018
Question

Dynamiclinkmediaserver at >100%

  • October 26, 2018
  • 11 replies
  • 25581 views

Using a Mid 2018 MacBook Pro with i9 Processor + 32GB RAM and as soon as I start, and long after I close, Lightroom CC for Mac 2.0 the dynamiclinkmediaserver starts up and uses >100% of CPU resources and the fans start whirring to try and keep things cool!

I assume this does not hog so much resource by design so how do I stop it?

Peter H

This topic has been closed for replies.

11 replies

Participant
November 6, 2023

Got same problem here. It runs >250% of CPU resources while importing photos. 

Using MacBook Air M2 2022, Sonoma 14.1. Latest version of Lightroom Classic.

Please help to resolve this! Thanks!

 

Rikk Flohr_Photography
Community Manager
Community Manager
November 6, 2023

You’ve posted to an ancient thread. It is highly unlikely that the issue described in this thread, though not impossible, is the same one you are currently experiencing. Rather than resurrect an old thread that is seemingly similar, you are better off posting to a new thread with fresh, complete information, including system information, a complete description of the problem, and step-by-step instructions for reproduction. 

 

If the issue is the same, we will merge you back into the appropriate location. 

 

Thank you!

 

Rikk Flohr: Adobe Photography Org
Participant
August 10, 2020
chrispy104
Inspiring
September 7, 2020

Making the folder hidden doesn't make a lick of difference whatsoever.  Lightroon still re-creates the dynamiclinkmediaserver folder.

When Lightroom opens it creates an instance of dynamiclinkmediaserver and dynamiclinkmanager.  When Lightroom is closed it removes dynamiclinkmanager but leaves dynamiclinkmediaserver as an orphan process.

 

When you re-open Lightroom straight away it creates another instance of dynamiclinkmediaserver along side dynamiclinkmanager.  When you then close Lightroom the dynamiclinkmanager is removed but you now have two instances of dynamiclinkmediaserver running as orphan processes and both consuming 100% CPU.

 

This is just dumb.   There is no excuse for this shoddy coding.

 

I should not have to be opening Activity Monitor every time to remove a process that Lightroom should be taking care of as part of memory management and process management.

Participant
June 29, 2020

Same problem, Runnign specced up MBP 16"
Dynamic Link Media Server goes bananas and runs CPU at 100% when using Bridge or PS even after shutting down Adobe programs it keeps running.
Why is Adobe not fixing this?

Participant
June 11, 2020

Same issue with videos imported to catalog.

MBP 16" maxed out

Inspiring
June 20, 2020

Happened to me for the first time today. LrC is the only open Adobe app, and never happened before now (but there have been no end of updates to LrC, PS and CR this last few days). I don't have any video files in my catalogue, only photographs. I killed it with Activity Monitor (using macOS 10.14.6, MBA 8,1, 16GB/1.5TB).

b1nc0d
Participant
June 8, 2020

Same Issue when importing Videos.

 

MBP MID 2014 - Mojave

Participant
May 14, 2020

Same problem. I confirm that is only a matter of video files.

I created a new catalogue where i exported only my video to organize and sort (with th eprecious help of AnyFilter !!!).

But i often have (not always) that issue too.

Sometimes i solve by quitting Dynamiclinkserver but is not working al the times.........hard times..... 

Known Participant
May 18, 2020

Same issue. 2018 32G i9 MacBook Pro running Catalina. I have a large catalog with 132k files in it, mostly photos. I have some video files but Lightroom Classsic fails to load a large number of them (some from Fuji X series cameras, some from a few different versions of GoPros). Next step for me is to remove all the video files from the project but I was hoping to be able to manage my video files within Lightroom.

 

This issue was reported well over a year ago no progress, Adobe. Just as bad, I haven't been able to find a description of what this service does. 

moe_vil
Participant
May 7, 2020

Same issue here. Lightroom has been closed for days and my computer was running slow. Was curious what was causing my computer to freeze while running only a web browser. Opened up Task Manager and sure enough dynamiclinkmediaserver was running at Very High power usage. I'm on the same  boat with everybody else. The adobe suite (premiere pro, lightroom, and photoshop, after affects) have been useless the past 3-5 years because of this. This is all happening ever after buying a brand new computer and building it msyelf.

Admirable_goal15C3
Inspiring
December 14, 2019

I might have just found the simple solution. 

According to the info I'm finding around, this process is related to indexing video files. So you might never encounter the issue if you don't have videos in your Lightroom collection.

I tried renaming the file (dynamiclinkmediaserver-stop) and Lightroom opened normally with no issues. The file doesn't get recreated and I was still able to navigate my video folder inside Lightroom without a problem.
That process is no longer in my Activity Monitor now.


I'll keep it this way and monitor any possible issue. Hopefully that's all it takes to fix this.

CinVA
Participant
January 26, 2020

Helpful bit about the video files - that's predominatly what I'm working with at the moment.

 

However, I tried renaming the dynamicmediaserver to dynamicmediaserver-stop and it worked for 1-import (predominantly small video files shot on a GoPro total of 41 altogether) and then the import hung up again and stopped

 

Yet a NEW dynamicmediaserver folder was created (along side the old dynamicmediaserver-stop) and dynamicmediaserver is consuming 100%+ of my CPU (Mac Pro - Catalina 10.15.2 64GB RAM 

May 6, 2019

Mine just keeps crashing when I'm in lightroom classic. I don't know if it's the CPU thing or not. I have the whole suite. All the programs that will run on windows 7.

moshmosh007
Known Participant
February 27, 2019

hello!

what is this dynamiclinkmediaserver?? it use heavy CPU..

.Sahil.Chawla

its under adobe directory

Known Participant
November 30, 2019

This is still an issue with Lightroom Classic - 100% CPU even after quitting.  Much worse after the recent upgrades and migration to Catalina.

 

The permission script does nothing, as none of those folders exist.

 

Adobe, this appears to have been an issue for years...how about a real fix?

ryan_marshall
Inspiring
May 11, 2020

@ Lhotka did you ever figure anything out? I have a 19 Macbook Pro maxed out. Lightroom CC & Classic installed and even after I quit the program 'thisdynamiclinkmediaserver' is still running and sounds like my fan is about to explode.... This is pretty unprofessional of Adobe when your paying money every month. Its no May 2020 and I'm reading of this issue from 11/19 and maybe earlier. I was able to manually force quit it - but that's the thing - why should I have to? When we quit Lightroom products 'if' dynamiclinkmediaserver is truly needed it should stop working as well. At first, I thought it was Google Chrome but this morning I realized it was this program. ANYway - hope this is fixed soon so I don't have to keep manually force quitting the program.....