Moving User folder to HDD

Hey so I have a Late 2015 iMac 5K Retina (iMac 17,1). I'm trying to move my user folder, which is an admin, to the HDD from the SSD but it doesn't work. The files will transfer and I'll go to usergroups and change the file path from Users/{username} to Volumes/{path}/{username} but when I restart and log in, its as if its a new account. None of my preferences are there and none of my files are there. How do I fix this? I'm also running the latest software.


And also, when I log into that account, I can see the files but it says I don't have permissions to open any of them even though I'm an Admin.


Also it keeps prompting me to put the password to repair my library, I put my password but the prompt keeps popping up and it doesn't go away.

iMac 27", macOS 10.14

Posted on Feb 22, 2019 5:10 PM

Reply

Similar questions

5 replies

Feb 23, 2019 10:14 AM in response to Glen Doggett

Did you follow this procedure?

https://www.lifewire.com/move-macs-home-folder-new-location-2260157


I would suggest that you only do that for a secondary User account, not the first and only admin account on your machine. They have this tip in the article above:

"Although there's no specific requirement for the startup drive to have

an administrator account, it’s a good idea for general troubleshooting

purposes. Imagine that you've moved all your user accounts to another

drive, either internal or external, and then something happens to make

the drive that is holding your user accounts fail. You can use the Recovery HD

partition to access troubleshooting and repair utilities, but it's

easier to have a spare administrator account on your startup drive that

you simply log into when an emergency occurs."

Feb 23, 2019 10:09 AM in response to Taziamoma

On a earlier version of Mac OS X, I tried doing a similar thing with my Applications folder to put it on a different drive to conserve space. After copying the original /Applications to the new drive, I replaced the original with a UNIX soft link to the new location. This worked fairly well for the most part, but future updates of some Applications, and installers, did not play nice with my soft link. So, I abandoned that approach and ended up just getting a larger hard drive that could fit every thing.


I really like your idea of putting large data files/libraries in your User home folder to a bigger, slower HD, and keeping the main operating system and applications on the smaller faster SSD, that is a very good idea, and an obvious way to maximize the performance of your system that, without question, anyone knowledgeable about computers could clearly recognize.


Because the operating system may have certain required folders for /Users and their ~/ home directories, even using the underpinnings of UNIX to trick it might not work, though it should. Some UNIX things may be overridden by the Mac OS, I am not really sure what is going on there.


Maybe you can consider a hybrid approach to this...inside the normal OS created /User/home folder, create one UNIX soft link, or Mac alias on the SSD to point to a folder on the other HD, then just organize that folder as you want. I think as long as you have the /Users/home folder unchanged, and that is a regular folder instead of an alias itself, then whatever you put in the aliases folder within that ~/ folder, should be fine. Maybe not the ideal approach, since you have one additional layer to go through, but /Users/home/a/Documents, is not too bad, where your ~/a is an alias that points to /HD/a or whatever. (Don't move your ~/Library)


Not really a solution to your original approach, but a work-around. Sounds like some of the problems you are having are due to the file access permissions, and not sure that I can give advice on how to fix that, since I don't totally understand what you did.

This thread has been closed by the system or the community team. You may vote for any posts you find helpful, or search the Community for additional answers.

Moving User folder to HDD

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.