8

I can't find any instructions how to put a Mac programmatically into sleep mode (in Objective-C). I'm sure it should be only one line, but could you give me a hint?

7
  • Related: stackoverflow.com/questions/3315685/…
    – user142019
    Jun 5, 2011 at 13:38
  • Yea it's kind of related, but not answering my question anyhow.
    – tamasgal
    Jun 5, 2011 at 13:43
  • But it might be interesting for others who visit this question.
    – user142019
    Jun 5, 2011 at 13:44
  • 2
    You can call Sleep, but I hope there’s actually a proper Cocoa function.
    – Josh Lee
    Jun 5, 2011 at 13:54
  • 3
    jleedev, you misunderstood my question. I asked for putting the Mac into sleep mode ;-)
    – tamasgal
    Jun 5, 2011 at 15:15

6 Answers 6

9
#include <stdio.h> 
#include <CoreServices/CoreServices.h>
#include <Carbon/Carbon.h>

SendAppleEventToSystemProcess(kAESleep);

OSStatus SendAppleEventToSystemProcess(AEEventID EventToSend)
{
    AEAddressDesc targetDesc;
    static const ProcessSerialNumber kPSNOfSystemProcess = { 0, kSystemProcess };
    AppleEvent eventReply = {typeNull, NULL};
    AppleEvent appleEventToSend = {typeNull, NULL};

    OSStatus error = noErr;

    error = AECreateDesc(typeProcessSerialNumber, &kPSNOfSystemProcess, 
                                            sizeof(kPSNOfSystemProcess), &targetDesc);

    if (error != noErr)
    {
        return(error);
    }

    error = AECreateAppleEvent(kCoreEventClass, EventToSend, &targetDesc, 
                   kAutoGenerateReturnID, kAnyTransactionID, &appleEventToSend);

    AEDisposeDesc(&targetDesc);
    if (error != noErr)
    {
        return(error);
    }

    error = AESend(&appleEventToSend, &eventReply, kAENoReply, 
                  kAENormalPriority, kAEDefaultTimeout, NULL, NULL);

    AEDisposeDesc(&appleEventToSend);
    if (error != noErr)
    {
        return(error);
    }

    AEDisposeDesc(&eventReply);

    return(error); 
}

More detail on https://developer.apple.com/library/content/qa/qa1134/_index.html

1
8

You can also use scripting bridge. Draft code is

SystemEventsApplication *systemEvents = [SBApplication applicationWithBundleIdentifier:@"com.apple.systemevents"];
[systemEvents sleep]; 
2
  • This one works in a sandboxed app on Mountain Lion, too. Thanks! :)
    – Form
    Aug 1, 2012 at 2:06
  • sorry for the late reply, but this one doesn't work in a sandboxed app anymore. Didn't find another way either.
    – Gary
    Oct 2, 2015 at 9:48
7

Tom is correct. The AE methods fail if the display is sleeping. pmset sleepnow works 100%.

NSTask  *pmsetTask = [[NSTask alloc] init];
pmsetTask.launchPath = @"/usr/bin/pmset";
pmsetTask.arguments = @[@"sleepnow"];
[pmsetTask launch];
1
  • 1
    This one works on 10.13 sandboxed the others not anymore!
    – Tibidabo
    Oct 5, 2017 at 23:43
6

You can use AppleScript

NSAppleScript *script = [[NSAppleScript alloc] initWithSource:@"tell application \"System Events\" to sleep"];
NSDictionary *errorInfo;
[script executeAndReturnError:&errorInfo];
[script release];
1
  • I know it works with AppleScript, but I would like to do it with Obj-C. Thanks anyway!
    – tamasgal
    Jun 5, 2011 at 15:25
2

Just in case someone is curious how pmset sleepnow actually works - it uses IOPMSleepSystem API from the Power Management section of the IOKit framework. You can check this via examining the pmset.c source code (link from macOS 10.13.3).

So instead of calling pmset you can request sleep via the following snippet:

#include <IOKit/pwr_mgt/IOPMLib.h>

void SleepNow()
{
    io_connect_t fb = IOPMFindPowerManagement(MACH_PORT_NULL);
    if (fb != MACH_PORT_NULL)
    {
        IOPMSleepSystem(fb);
        IOServiceClose(fb);
    }
}

Don't be scared by the caller must be root or the console user remark in the documentation since it appears to be working for any standard logged in user.

By following the source code, it looks like it calls into IOUserClient::clientHasPrivilege with kIOClientPrivilegeLocalUser which ends up checking if the caller is present in the IOConsoleUsers array in the root IORegistry entry, and apparently currently logged in user is always present there.

1

I found that running pmset sleepnow worked during a screensaver, while the first two answers did not.

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