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usagora

macrumors 601
Original poster
Nov 17, 2017
4,869
4,456
This is odd. Got this warning message on my Mac Mini after the weekend when it was literally just sitting there doing nothing (at least nothing user-generated). NEVER got this message before on any Mac I've ever owned and I've run far more apps than this at the same time without issue (including on this very Mac). I closed all apps and restarted since it had been a while since my last restart. The Activity Monitor screenshot was from just before restarting. Will report back if the message pops up again. I didn't actually use the computer before restarting, so I don't know if there were any actual issues or not.

Screen Shot 2022-10-18 at 9.05.57 AM.png


Screen Shot 2022-10-18 at 9.13.37 AM.png
 

usagora

macrumors 601
Original poster
Nov 17, 2017
4,869
4,456
From the second image, probably just quitting Chrome would have solved the problem. Those (Renderer)s can get out of control sometimes :)

It's just strange how it was never an issue before (at least, I never got this message before). I use Chrome constantly.
 

mi7chy

macrumors G4
Oct 24, 2014
10,602
11,283
Enable 'view all processes' in Activity Monitor. Probably notorious MacOS WindowServer memory leak.
 

appltech

macrumors 6502a
Apr 23, 2020
688
167
Try to turn off your Mac if You don't need it anymore (like bedtime, etc.)

And don't leave Mac with lots of apps opened in Sleep mode (disable it as well as auto screen lock if not using).
 

usagora

macrumors 601
Original poster
Nov 17, 2017
4,869
4,456
Try to turn off your Mac if You don't need it anymore (like bedtime, etc.)

And don't leave Mac with lots of apps opened in Sleep mode (disable it as well as auto screen lock if not using).

I've been running Mac desktops 24/7 for almost 20 years with no issue (I just put the display to sleep).
 
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appltech

macrumors 6502a
Apr 23, 2020
688
167
I've been running Mac desktops 24/7 for almost 20 years with no issue (I just put the display to sleep).
And let it be so for the future.
Maybe it's my bad luck.
Or maybe it's because there're different apps on systems.
Or maybe I'm having some flashbacks from my experience with previous macOS/Windows bugs and dodgy moments
 

kibepo73

Suspended
Jun 2, 2022
61
5
There are various reasons for "Your system run out of application memory" error on Mac, such as:

1. Running a lot of applications simultaneously;
2. Opening browser with excessive extensions installed;
3. Running low on disk space;
4. Memory leak caused by an abnormal program;
5. Virus attack.

However, to fix the issue you can try the below fixes:

1. Force Quit Applications
2. Update macOS & apps
3. Uninstall browser extensions
4. Clean up Desktop icons
5. Free up mac’s disk space
6. Add/Expand physical memory

Hope the above fixes help you resolve the error!
 

usagora

macrumors 601
Original poster
Nov 17, 2017
4,869
4,456
There are various reasons for "Your system run out of application memory" error on Mac, such as:

1. Running a lot of applications simultaneously;
2. Opening browser with excessive extensions installed;
3. Running low on disk space;
4. Memory leak caused by an abnormal program;
5. Virus attack.

However, to fix the issue you can try the below fixes:

1. Force Quit Applications
2. Update macOS & apps
3. Uninstall browser extensions
4. Clean up Desktop icons
5. Free up mac’s disk space
6. Add/Expand physical memory

Hope the above fixes help you resolve the error!

Thanks. Based on what others have pointed out, it's probably some anomaly with Chrome that triggered this. I've never had an issue running lots of apps simultaneously and have over 50% free disk space.
 
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