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alglynn

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  1. Apparently, similar problems can be experienced by users of Final Cut and other software. After speaking to Piriform Support and an Apple Technical Advisor, I have come across the following solution: 1) Lion and Mountain Lion users will need to unhide the user Library folder: in Terminal, sudo chflags nohidden ~/Library/ will permanently unhide it for you 2) Find ~/Library/Caches/com.apple.audiounits.cache (or whichever cache file you need to keep) in your user folder 3) Move the file to a different location (i.e. not in the ~/Library/Caches/ folder or its subdirectories) while CCleaner deletes caches 4) Put it back! After doing this, Logic’s own cache will have been deleted, but it won’t need to scan your Audio Units again. Problem solved. However, this is quite tiresome as well, and not something you want to be doing every day. Apple advise that clearing caches needn’t be done very often, and that doing so will add to the time taken to load apps. Clean freaks won’t care much for that advice though… The best solution would be for Piriform to include in an update to CCleaner the option to leave certain cache files, in the same way as can be done with cookies. Fix request please!
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