MacBook Pro battery died during 1.2 TB file transfer, now stuck at 413.38 GB - How to find and delete copied files?

while copying 1.2 TB files from one ssd drive to a second larger ssd drive, my macbook pro (M1 2021) ran out of battery and died before finishing copying the files. Now it is stuck at having copied 413.38 GB of the 1.2 TB files, and not moving forward after overnight chance to do so. OS Tahoe 26.2. To find which files have indeed been copied over is quite daunting- 46,152 items/413.38 GB. Assuming better to find them and delete them off the receiving SSD drive. Might be ramifications etc etc etc. Sure am glad I copied, not moved in an abundance of caution. A whole lot more familiar with windows brain surgery- decades experience, Pascal, Unix, C++, microprocessors etc programming courses versus 2021 my first foray into Mac and duly noted Apple is not a fan of surgery by owners. ;-)




[Re-Titled by Moderator]

Original Title: MacBook Pro battery died in the middle of copying 1.2 TB files from one SSD drive to a second SSD drive and is not proceeding forward.

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 26.2

Posted on Feb 3, 2026 4:30 AM

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Posted on Feb 3, 2026 11:36 AM

If unchanged from last night, I would click the x to cancel that task.


If the Macbook battery ran out of power during write operations, the external drive may have had its file system damaged. Is the external drive receiving its power from the laptop. To check for that damage, run Disk Utility First Aid on the external drive. It should complete with no errors mentioned. If it offers to repair the disk, have it do that.


What evidence do you have that there are ghost files?


I would verify the disk is clean with Disk Utility First Aid. Then I would restart the copy with stable power for all the drives and for the laptop. If a file already exists with the same name during the copy, have it overwrite all those duplicates. For this copy, instead of using Finder, which does not perform well for enormous copies of scores of files, I suggest that you make a "clone" copy using SuperDuper, which is free for the minimal featured version which is all you need. It's a good program to have with the full f featured version so I also suggest you buy a copy. You can alternatively use Carbon Copy Cloner, which is not free but also is inexpensive.


9 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Feb 3, 2026 11:36 AM in response to cragsjo

If unchanged from last night, I would click the x to cancel that task.


If the Macbook battery ran out of power during write operations, the external drive may have had its file system damaged. Is the external drive receiving its power from the laptop. To check for that damage, run Disk Utility First Aid on the external drive. It should complete with no errors mentioned. If it offers to repair the disk, have it do that.


What evidence do you have that there are ghost files?


I would verify the disk is clean with Disk Utility First Aid. Then I would restart the copy with stable power for all the drives and for the laptop. If a file already exists with the same name during the copy, have it overwrite all those duplicates. For this copy, instead of using Finder, which does not perform well for enormous copies of scores of files, I suggest that you make a "clone" copy using SuperDuper, which is free for the minimal featured version which is all you need. It's a good program to have with the full f featured version so I also suggest you buy a copy. You can alternatively use Carbon Copy Cloner, which is not free but also is inexpensive.


Feb 3, 2026 7:14 AM in response to cragsjo

cragsjo wrote:

yes, major idiot move on my part. I didn’t note the starting total file size on the 4 TB drive. Just that I can’t find any copied new files in Finder…

Why don't you do a Get Info or run Disk Utility to see how much space is being utilized on the SSD in question? Then compare to the folders and files you can see, if they roughly agree, there are no copied files to worry about. Or simply list the files on the destination to see what, if anything, got copied. Or simply redo the copy and if it asks, tell it to overwrite any existing files with the same name as ones being copied. This is not a complex issue to address.

Feb 3, 2026 1:15 PM in response to cragsjo

If you're going to be copying or moving lots of files regularly then I recommend you either learn how to use rsync or get something like Carbon Copy Cloner or Backuplist+. In the case where a copy/move is interrupted you can just run rsync again and it will only process files that haven't been transferred or have changed. rsync is powerful and comes with a daunting list of command-line options ; the two apps I referenced are user-friendly front ends for it. Others are probably available.

Feb 3, 2026 6:31 AM in response to cragsjo

cragsjo wrote:

Looking, but not finding any successfully copied files to the 4 TB drive… 413 Gigs! So am thinking that Apple is hiding all that until the complete successful copy over??? That’s a lot of ghost files….

Usually a restart of the Mac clears out those leftover pieces. I think running the battery to zero can cause a disorderly shutdown (or sleep) and thus whatever was possibly copied is suspect. Has the SSD free space decreased by 400 GB?

A whole lot more familiar with windows brain surgery- decades experience, Pascal, Unix, C++, microprocessors etc programming courses versus 2021 my first foray into Mac and duly noted

Well, Windows brain surgery is fine, but trying a large file copy on a laptop with inadequate charge sounds like a basic boo-boo!

Feb 3, 2026 6:05 AM in response to cragsjo

Looking, but not finding any successfully copied files to the 4 TB drive… 413 Gigs! So am thinking that Apple is hiding all that until the complete successful copy over??? That’s a lot of ghost files….was hoping for a Hail Mary pass allowing restarting the present copy.. not happening? Thanks for your reply Limnos

Feb 3, 2026 9:02 AM in response to steve626

Yes, 6:06 am today, I searched Finder for the parent folders of the files I wanted copied. No such folders there on the 4TB drive. Wouldn’t it create a folder first and then populate with copied files? Since I did not take a screenshot of Get Info prior to copying the files to the 4TB SSD, and comparing to now, not sure what that will add positively to moving forward. Do you think the space taken by ghost files will be accounted for by the Get Info? but not in Finder? Disk Utility, thanks. I appreciate your reply as well. unchanged from last night…

Feb 3, 2026 1:13 PM in response to steve626

So checked both the 2, and 4 TB drives with First Aid, both good. Rebooted… and everything popped up, iLok, Native Instrument, MBOx control, and Avid Link…. and the initial PT screen did too. It looked promising, PT was alerting of a number of things it was performing, asked me to name the session. Did that, but no edit window showed. Went into Menu: File: open, and when I asked it to open the file I had just asked it to create, it had me save it, to open it. And did open. I guess that comes under a Whatevah! kinda deal.


As for the evidence: it advised me yesterday that ~413 Gigs had already copied to the 4 TB drive (see previous screenshot). When I looked for it- a simple search, no such files were on the 4 TB drive. It wasn’t like it was a hard to find item if they were there- (4TB) Extreme Pro \Avid “stuff"… not any of it there. or (4TB) Extreme Pro\NI libraries, etc. Thank you for your useful information. I didn’t know about the Disk Utility First Aid. Thanks for the tip on SuperDuper. Addition: just checked and superduper is not a macbook program….

MacBook Pro battery died during 1.2 TB file transfer, now stuck at 413.38 GB - How to find and delete copied files?

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