A flashing question mark appears when you start your Mac


 
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Operating Systems OS X (Apple) OS X Support RSS A flashing question mark appears when you start your Mac
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Old 11-07-2008
A flashing question mark appears when you start your Mac

If you see a flashing question mark when you start your Mac, it's probably because it can't find the system software it needs to start up. Usually, all you have to do to get your Mac back up and running is remind it where its software is. After the flashing question mark appears, one of two things may happen: The computer starts up normally after a brief delay. The computer does not start up.

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CACHE(3)						   BSD Library Functions Manual 						  CACHE(3)

NAME
sys_cache_control, sys_icache_invalidate, sys_dcache_flush -- cache control LIBRARY
Standard C Library (libc, -lc) SYNOPSIS
#include <libkern/OSCacheControl.h> int sys_cache_control(int function, void *start, size_t len); void sys_icache_invalidate(void *start, size_t len); void sys_dcache_flush(void *start, size_t len); DESCRIPTION
These functions operate on every cache line containing one of the len bytes of memory pointed to by start. Normally the operations apply to every processor in the system, but the exact semantics of these operations is platform dependent. They should be used with caution. sys_cache_control() performs the operation specified by function. Refer to the header file for a list of currently supported functions. sys_icache_invalidate() prepares memory for execution, typically by invalidating the instruction cache for the indicated range. This should be called after writing machine instructions to memory, and before executing them. On IA32 processors this function is a NOP, because their instruction caches are coherent. sys_dcache_flush() writes modified data cache lines to main memory, and then invalidates all lines in the range being operated on. It can be useful when dealing with cache incoherent devices or DMA. RETURN VALUES
sys_cache_control() returns zero on success, ENOTSUP if function is not valid. SEE ALSO
atomic(3), barrier(3) HISTORY
These functions first appeared in Mac OS 10.5 (Leopard). Darwin September 21, 2006 Darwin