Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

Heat_Fan89

macrumors 68030
Original poster
Feb 23, 2016
2,930
3,817
I've read and don't know if it's true that if you disable Spotlight from searching your Mac and if you add your Hard Drive in the "Privacy Pane" that it will disable "indexing". Is that true? Is it harmful to the OS in the way it operates?

I find that after each update my Mac runs hotter and Spotlight and Windowserver "processes" take up some CPU resources which cause my 2012 mini to run hotter. I just wanted some thoughts on what others think?
 

fisherking

macrumors G4
Jul 16, 2010
11,252
5,563
ny somewhere
once spotlight does it's first run, the rest is incremental. but perhaps yours is stuck indexing? you could put your HD in privacy, then shortly after, remove it... and that should jump-start indexing (but google this, am not entirely sure about it). i would think you'd want a searchable index, and again, it should not be eating up resources once the drive is in fact indexed...
 

eRondeau

macrumors 65816
Mar 3, 2004
1,184
474
Canada's South Coast
I'm no coding expert, but it makes sense that your Mac is running hotter and the Spotlight -related processes spool-up when you do a MacOS upgrade. Each upgrade changes apx 2GB of "stuff" that Spotlight needs to re-index. As it's one of the core services of MacOS you should probably let Spotlight do its thing unhindered. I'm sure lots of other functions depend on Spotlight being up-to-date.
 

chrfr

macrumors G5
Jul 11, 2009
13,709
7,279
I've read and don't know if it's true that if you disable Spotlight from searching your Mac and if you add your Hard Drive in the "Privacy Pane" that it will disable "indexing". Is that true? Is it harmful to the OS in the way it operates?

I find that after each update my Mac runs hotter and Spotlight and Windowserver "processes" take up some CPU resources which cause my 2012 mini to run hotter. I just wanted some thoughts on what others think?
I use Spotlight all the time; it's integral to the functionality of many apps so for me turning it off would have a very significantly negative effect in the usability of the computer. The Spotlight processes should stabilize after some time and should not be taking up many resources in general.
Windowserver is how apps display on your screen, so there's no disabling that.
 

fisherking

macrumors G4
Jul 16, 2010
11,252
5,563
ny somewhere
I'm no coding expert, but it makes sense that your Mac is running hotter and the Spotlight -related processes spool-up when you do a MacOS upgrade. Each upgrade changes apx 2GB of "stuff" that Spotlight needs to re-index. As it's one of the core services of MacOS you should probably let Spotlight do its thing unhindered. I'm sure lots of other functions depend on Spotlight being up-to-date.

fwiw, spotlight doesn't index system files, etc. so it does not have much to do after an OS update (just a little to do). i use 'find any file' if i need to do 'deeper' searches; spotlight is good only for what it's good for ?
 

Honza1

macrumors 6502a
Nov 30, 2013
940
441
US
Disabling Spotlight will break lots of maxOS functions. Mail is using Spotlight for smart folders and some functionality, TimeMachine needs working Spotlight. I have once or twice Spotlight break on me for some reason and fixing it was real pain - and critically necessary for my Mac to be really usable. Also, after running once through your files, which may take time and cpu, Spotlight takes little resources.
Tl;DR: Do not break Spotlight, you will regret it.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.