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I have an external audio interface (M-audio fast track c400). In order to get my macbook to recognize it (display in audio/midi setup), I have to reboot, which is a hassle. I have had other m-audio interfaces that were automatically detected when connected, and I'm pretty sure this one should be the same. Most posts around the internet suggest updating the OS or the software/firmware for the device. I have done all of those with no luck. I am currently running OS X 10.8.5.

Is there a way to force OS X to reload the device? Preferably some command line voodoo that I could fire off quickly when needed or wrap up in a nice little shell script.

Edit: Progress..

The problem appears to be fixed now... I'm not sure how the following solved the problem. If you know, please comment!

Inspired by @sbugert's answer, I started looking into other system daemon's that might do the trick if restarted. As a shot in the dark I killed coreservicesd. This caused the OS to become visibly unstable and I was eventually logged out automatically. To my surprise, when I logged back in, my audio interface was recognized..

Based on that, I hypothesized that killing coreservicesd and logging out/in may be a possible (ugly) workaround. So I unplugged the interface and plugged it back in, and as expected, it was not recognized. So I killed coreservicesd and attempted to log out, however I could not get the system to log out due to the instability caused by killing coreservicesd. I eventually was forced to do a "hard" shutdown (i.e. holding the power button until it turns off). After booting up the macbook again, the interface is now recognized automatically every time I plug it in. I suspect that this "hard" reset may have solved the issue without all the shenanigans with the coreservices daemon, but I have no way to test that.

If anyone can shed light on this, please do!

Edit: It stopped working again so I don't know what's up.

RyanM
  • 1,193

6 Answers6

121

EDIT: most likely only works for osx before 10.13

This is what you need,

sudo kextunload /System/Library/Extensions/AppleHDA.kext
sudo kextload /System/Library/Extensions/AppleHDA.kext

But if you want to kill your coreaudio as well,

 ps aux | grep 'coreaudio[d]' | awk '{print $2}' | xargs sudo kill

use with caution.
The grep target is written this way specifically to exclude grepping the grep process itself in the ps out.

Ali
  • 1,528
102

Try typing this into Terminal:

sudo killall coreaudiod

This will kill the coreaudio process and restart it.

sbugert
  • 1,121
20

The "proper" way to restart coreaudiod is this: sudo launchctl kickstart -kp system/com.apple.audio.coreaudiod

JGurtz
  • 378
4

Same solution but with different variation

sudo kill -9 `ps ax|grep 'coreaudio[a-z]' | awk '{print $1}'`
user1573604
  • 161
  • 4
0

I have the same interface and that happened to me a lot when I first got it.

I thought the audio drivers in my Mac were the problem, but it was just the way I plugged in the interface.

Every time I wanted to use it, I had to unplug it and plug it back into the computer.

Dave M
  • 13,250
-2

Here I have discovered that if I select another device before disconnecting the interface (Fast Track C400 too), I can connect it again later with no problem. But if I am using the fast track and then disconnect it, it can't connect again until restart it.