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System Storage space

Hello, I have spent several days trying to free up space on my MacBook Pro. Currently 237 GB of my 500GB mac is take up by "System storage". When I run programs like DaisyDisk it says that only about 6 GB is actually system storage and the rest is hidden files of some sort. I can't figure out what could possibly be taking up so much space! And no its not time machine backups I checked.


For reference I am currently using macOS High Sierra.





MacBook Pro 13", macOS 10.13

Posted on Jan 7, 2020 6:11 PM

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Posted on Jan 13, 2020 8:27 PM

You aren't clicking or selecting a Desktop drive icon:



Note the disk icon in the upper left corner. The second arrow points to the disk data - Format, Capacity, Available, and Used.


The categories used in System Storage are arbitrary. There is no such organization on the drive itself. The category in which a file is placed is dependent on the file's extension. The extension is a coding that follows the filename and consists of a period or "dot" and three or four characters intended to indicate the type of file. For example, ".txt" means text; ".docx" indicates a Word document file; ".dmg" means disk image; "mp3" is an audio file as is ".acc". These are simply examples. They are used to identify certain types of files. Where the extension is missing or unknown the system classifies it as a document if it contains text or a system file if it contains hexadecimal characters like an application might contain. This is a simplified explanation that is neither inclusive nor complete but should give you an idea as to why I say the categories are arbitrary and how files might be placed into one of the categories.


There are hundreds of file types and extensions to identify them. The System Storage categories are partly shown below:



I hope this gives you some idea of why this measure is irrelevant. It is only going to be correct immediately after Spotlight re-indexes the drive provided you do not make changes during re-indexing. The only information you truly need keep track of is how much available space is on the drive because that is your file-saving limit. If you find yourself running out of space, then macOS cannot function properly and will slow down or the file directory becomes permanently corrupted beyond repair, your data are lost, and the only recourse is reformatting the drive.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jan 13, 2020 8:27 PM in response to RyyyMyyy

You aren't clicking or selecting a Desktop drive icon:



Note the disk icon in the upper left corner. The second arrow points to the disk data - Format, Capacity, Available, and Used.


The categories used in System Storage are arbitrary. There is no such organization on the drive itself. The category in which a file is placed is dependent on the file's extension. The extension is a coding that follows the filename and consists of a period or "dot" and three or four characters intended to indicate the type of file. For example, ".txt" means text; ".docx" indicates a Word document file; ".dmg" means disk image; "mp3" is an audio file as is ".acc". These are simply examples. They are used to identify certain types of files. Where the extension is missing or unknown the system classifies it as a document if it contains text or a system file if it contains hexadecimal characters like an application might contain. This is a simplified explanation that is neither inclusive nor complete but should give you an idea as to why I say the categories are arbitrary and how files might be placed into one of the categories.


There are hundreds of file types and extensions to identify them. The System Storage categories are partly shown below:



I hope this gives you some idea of why this measure is irrelevant. It is only going to be correct immediately after Spotlight re-indexes the drive provided you do not make changes during re-indexing. The only information you truly need keep track of is how much available space is on the drive because that is your file-saving limit. If you find yourself running out of space, then macOS cannot function properly and will slow down or the file directory becomes permanently corrupted beyond repair, your data are lost, and the only recourse is reformatting the drive.

Jan 7, 2020 8:21 PM in response to AlexLJ

Get Correct Storage Information


Do not use the information from the Storage section of the About This Mac dialog. Ignore the Storage information as it is typically wrong. To find out the correct information for any disk: Select a Desktop disk icon. Press Command-I to open the Get Info window and look at the topmost panel displayed. You will find the disk information displayed for Capacity, Available, and Used. If you have more than one disk/partition then repeat for each one on your Desktop.


The categories found in the Storage section of About This Mac is simply an arbitrary way of displaying files on your drive. There are no such categories actually on the drive.



Jan 13, 2020 5:27 PM in response to Kappy

What do you mean by topmost panel? I have tried clicking on the desktop icon in the finder and hitting command-i, but I don't see the Capacity, Available, and Used sections. It tells me "General:... Kind:... Files..." but that won't tell me how much is there on the whole drive, just the desktop.


If system storage is arbitrary what umbrella category do files fall under?


My system: Macbook Pro 13-inch 2017 Mojave 10.14.6

System Storage space

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