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Startup disk mysteriously full

I searched for this issue and could to find one similar to mine.


I have a Mac Pro 4,1 running 10.11.3 256GB Crucial SSD (M4-CT256M4SSD2) as the startup drive.

The startup disk full warning came up and I saw that I only had 7mb left. I never store anything except a few docs and downloads in the home folder. my iTunes and photographs have separate drives so I can keep the startup just to the bare essentials of the OS. I quickly cleared some junk off so that I didn't have a fatal error and got myself 29 GB of wiggle room. came back 2 hours later and its down to 21 GB. Been holding there for about a half hour.


If I do a get info on my Home Folder it shows 169 GB in that folder, but when I check the individual sub-folders there is only about 3 GB in the subfolders combined.


Any ideas on where this ghosted 166 GB is hiding?


Cheers! David

Mac Pro, OS X El Capitan (10.11.3), 4,1 Early 2009. 2.26 x2

Posted on Feb 12, 2016 6:12 PM

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4 replies

Feb 12, 2016 7:56 PM in response to dm_photo

For information about the Other category in the Storage display, please see this support article. If the display seems to be inaccurate, try rebuilding the Spotlight index.

Empty the Trash if you haven't already done so. If you use iPhoto, empty its internal Trash first:

iPhoto ▹ Empty Trash

In Photos:

File Show Recently Deleted Delete All

Do the same in other applications, such as Aperture, that have an internal Trash feature. Then restart the computer. That will temporarily free up some space.

According to Apple documentation, you need at least 9 GB of available space on the startup volume (as shown in the Finder Info window) for normal operation—not the mythical 10%, 15%, or any other percentage. You also need enough space left over to allow for growth of the data. There is little or no performance advantage to having more available space than the minimum Apple recommends. Available storage space that you'll never use is wasted space.

See this support article for some simple ways to free up storage space. A common waste of space is old iTunes backups of mobile devices. As illustrated in this support article, select the Devices tab in the iTunes preferences window, select the backups you want to delete, and click Delete Backups. Keep at least one backup of each device that you still use.

You can more effectively use a tool such as OmniDiskSweeper (ODS) to explore the volume and find out what's taking up the space. You can also delete files with it, but don't do that unless you're sure that you know what you're deleting and that all data is safely backed up. That means you have multiple backups, not just one. Note that ODS only works with OS X 10.8 or later.

Deleting files inside a photo or iTunes library will corrupt the library. Changes to such a library must be made from within the application that created it. The same goes for Mail files.

Proceed further only if the problem isn't solved by the above steps.

ODS can't see the whole filesystem when you run it just by double-clicking; it only sees files that you have permission to read. To see everything, you have to run it as root.

Back up all data now.

Install the app in the Applications folder as usual. Quit it if it's running.

Triple-click anywhere in the line of text below on this page to select it, then copy the selected text to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C.

security execute-with-privileges /A*/OmniDiskSweeper.app/*/M*/* 2>&-

Launch the built-in Terminal application in any one of the following ways:

☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)

☞ In the Finder, select Go Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.

☞ Open LaunchPad and start typing the name.

Paste into the Terminal window by pressing command-V. You'll be prompted for your login password.

The application window will open behind other open windows. When you scan a volume, the window will eventually show all files in all folders, sorted by size. It may take a few minutes for the app to finish scanning.

I don't recommend that you make a habit of doing this. Don't delete anything as root. If something needs to be deleted, make sure you know what it is and how it got there, and then delete it by other, safer, means. When in doubt, leave it alone or ask for guidance.

When you're done with the app, quit it and also quit Terminal.

Feb 12, 2016 8:27 PM in response to Linc Davis

I don't use iPhoto or Photos because of the idiotic file structuring. I download and backup all my images with the finder. I also have redundant backups of redundant backups. I have 6 internal hard drives in my tower so I am not wanting for storage. I don't care about using the startup drive for storage so the whole 10%, 15% myths or facts don't factor for me. I just like to keep my startup disk lean for peak performance of the drive.


Update - I did find 45 GB inside the hidden library folder inside the home folder that is mobile sync backups. Are those my iPhone and iPad iCloud backups? I thought those stored in the iTunes folder? Can they be moved? also my mail folder inside the home folder>library folder is 105 GB. wow! Can i get that to store elsewhere? Or is it forever stuck in that library folder?


Cheers

Startup disk mysteriously full

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