Martha Helena writes in with a problem that may have a few different angles. Her startup drive started to fill. Her Photos Library file is 12.5GB, and she had just a few gigabytes left on the drive. While she was able to copy an older iPhoto Library to the other drive, the Finder kept hanging up during the Photos Library transfer with this error:
The Finder can’t complete the operation because some data in “Photos Library” can’t be read or written. (Error code -36)
A decent number of people have received this error with an iPhoto or Photos Library, possibly because the media library folders are big folders full of other folders. This increases the odds that if you have a faulty file, it will scotch the copy. Because the library files are packages which look like files, the error gets reported for the package name, rather than revealing which file within the package is at fault.
You have a lot of possibilities to fix this. For starters, while this is an oddball one, some of the people who have had this failure have solved their copy operation holdup by fixing the destination drive’s format type.
Using CreateFile2 to open the photo file,got ERRORACCESSDENIED. I known that I can get Stream by pic.GetImage, but that doesn't solve my problem. My application migrate from other platform, I wrap my engine( which is coded in C) with Windows Runtime component. Unable to open photos in Photos app and Pictures Library. Original Title: Photo App Problem Photo are unable to open on photo apps, also cannot open pictures in my picture file any more. If you try to open an iPhoto or Aperture library after you've converted it to a Photos library, you'll see a message that Photos 'Cannot open migrated library.' Click Open Photos to view the library in the Photos app. Or you can open the original library in iPhoto 9.6.1 or Aperture 3.6. Published Date: May 13, 2016. Four Methods to Open and Repair Photos Library. If creating a new Photos library hasn't resolved your issues and you are still viewing messages such as the following when you try to open your photos, we might have to go a bit deeper to address the issue. Read on to know about four effective methods to open and repair your photos library.
Some external drives come preformatted for Windows in FAT32 format if they’re not listed as being specifically intended for Macs. Some iPhoto/Photos filename or related data may be incompatible with FAT32. (Some forum posts are from folks who thought it was in NTFS format, but Macs can only read, not write, to NTFS without additional software, so you wouldn’t be able to start copying at all.)
You can check whether you have a FAT32 partition on the external drive as follows:
If the volume shows FAT32, you need to reformat the drive. Make a complete backup of the volume, because erasing and reformatting a partition deletes all the stored data on it. Then and only then:
When the volume mounts on the Desktop, if you can copy the media library successfully now, hurray, that was the problem.
If that doesn’t solve the problem, I have two more suggestions:
You can open the media library package and copy items in small groups to see if you can identify which file or folder is corrupt. Follow these steps:
This is a lot to try, but it’s likely one of these solutions will move you along your way to success.
We’ve compiled a list of the questions we get asked most frequently along with answers and links to columns: read our super FAQ to see if your question is covered. If not, we’re always looking for new problems to solve! Email yours to mac911@macworld.com including screen captures as appropriate. Mac 911 can’t reply to—nor publish an answer to—every question, and we don’t provide direct troubleshooting advice.
Martha Helena writes in with a problem that may have a few different angles. Her startup drive started to fill. Her Photos Library file is 12.5GB, and she had just a few gigabytes left on the drive. While she was able to copy an older iPhoto Library to the other drive, the Finder kept hanging up during the Photos Library transfer with this error:
The Finder can’t complete the operation because some data in “Photos Library” can’t be read or written. (Error code -36)
A decent number of people have received this error with an iPhoto or Photos Library, possibly because the media library folders are big folders full of other folders. This increases the odds that if you have a faulty file, it will scotch the copy. Because the library files are packages which look like files, the error gets reported for the package name, rather than revealing which file within the package is at fault.
You have a lot of possibilities to fix this. For starters, while this is an oddball one, some of the people who have had this failure have solved their copy operation holdup by fixing the destination drive’s format type.
Some external drives come preformatted for Windows in FAT32 format if they’re not listed as being specifically intended for Macs. Some iPhoto/Photos filename or related data may be incompatible with FAT32. (Some forum posts are from folks who thought it was in NTFS format, but Macs can only read, not write, to NTFS without additional software, so you wouldn’t be able to start copying at all.)
You can check whether you have a FAT32 partition on the external drive as follows:
If the volume shows FAT32, you need to reformat the drive. Make a complete backup of the volume, because erasing and reformatting a partition deletes all the stored data on it. Then and only then:
When the volume mounts on the Desktop, if you can copy the media library successfully now, hurray, that was the problem.
If that doesn’t solve the problem, I have two more suggestions:
You can open the media library package and copy items in small groups to see if you can identify which file or folder is corrupt. Follow these steps:
This is a lot to try, but it’s likely one of these solutions will move you along your way to success.
We’ve compiled a list of the questions we get asked most frequently along with answers and links to columns: read our super FAQ to see if your question is covered. If not, we’re always looking for new problems to solve! Email yours to mac911@macworld.com including screen captures as appropriate. Mac 911 can’t reply to—nor publish an answer to—every question, and we don’t provide direct troubleshooting advice.