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frydrych

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 8, 2010
45
4
Sweden
I had 64 gb free on my Macbook air with mountain lion. Suddenly I lost 10gb for no reason and disc utility reports only 20gb free. So I have read some others posts that it might be a difference between finder and disc utility and that I should rely on finders free space.

So I tried to install something 23gb in size, with no luck since the disc is full. I ran disc utility and found some errors in reporting free space. Repaired but still the same and now there are no errors on the disc.

Ran Onyx and cleared everything I could think of, got back about 2gb.

Ran Omnidisksweeper and what I can see is that I have 48gb of used space. From my 128 gb disk it seems strange that I only have 57 gb free.

Disc utility reports me having 100gb used space.

Now when I think of it I had a friend who started installing World of warcraft yesterday to see how it ran on a macbook air but I quit the installer half way and deleted any trace that I found. Don't see anything taking up space that I can relate to WoW anyway.

Also reset pram and smc, no change...

Can't think of anything else.

Any of you guys have a suggestion?

Thanks

Fred
 

Namtaro

macrumors regular
Dec 4, 2011
135
0
Confusing post...
From what I'm hearing, you had 64GB free last time you checked, but lost 10GB. Disk Utility says 20GB is free which would indicate you lost 44GB, not 10GB?


Unlikely, but worth a shot. Might be local backups?

Click on :apple: > About This Mac > Storage Tab
 

Stewart21

macrumors regular
Dec 9, 2011
187
0
South Yorkshire
An old chestnut this one. Check to see if Time Machine is on but you do not have an external disk connected to your laptop. If it is on then Time Machine stores your backups on your hard drive until an external disk is available to back up to. This can eat up a lot of space. There are a few other things you can do to find out what is using space. Search this forum for many threads on this.

Stewart
 

frydrych

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 8, 2010
45
4
Sweden
Confusing post...
From what I'm hearing, you had 64GB free last time you checked, but lost 10GB. Disk Utility says 20GB is free which would indicate you lost 44GB, not 10GB?


Unlikely, but worth a shot. Might be local backups?

Click on :apple: > About This Mac > Storage Tab

Sorry for the confusion. Well I had 64 gb free when I noticed that I've lost 10gb to 54. Hadn't crossed my mind to check what took up the free space before.

I have a time capsule that does the backup so I don't have any local backups...
 

frydrych

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 8, 2010
45
4
Sweden
An old chestnut this one. Check to see if Time Machine is on but you do not have an external disk connected to your laptop. If it is on then Time Machine stores your backups on your hard drive until an external disk is available to back up to. This can eat up a lot of space. There are a few other things you can do to find out what is using space. Search this forum for many threads on this.

Stewart

I didn't think this applied to me since I had time capsule set up from start so I ignored the posts about local backups. But I did have a lot of space taken up by local backups.

Mystery solved!

Thanks!
 

Namtaro

macrumors regular
Dec 4, 2011
135
0
Ever since lion and mountain lion, there seems to be a glitch or maybe apple designed it that way, but even after syncing time machine backups, the local backups don't go away immediately so if you're transferring large files it can be a problem - at one point, I had it taking up 100gb on my ssd!. Using this will wipe the local backup instantly... I wouldn't recommend fully disabling it though.

To disable the local backup,

In Terminal :

Code:
sudo tmutil disablelocal

To Re-Enable the local backups :

Code:
sudo tmutil enablelocal
 

frydrych

macrumors member
Original poster
Aug 8, 2010
45
4
Sweden
Ever since lion and mountain lion, there seems to be a glitch or maybe apple designed it that way, but even after syncing time machine backups, the local backups don't go away immediately so if you're transferring large files it can be a problem - at one point, I had it taking up 100gb on my ssd!. Using this will wipe the local backup instantly... I wouldn't recommend fully disabling it though.

To disable the local backup,

In Terminal :

Code:
sudo tmutil disablelocal

To Re-Enable the local backups :

Code:
sudo tmutil enablelocal

Sweet, just gained 56gb of lost space! This must be a bug. I read that if space was needed the local backups should make the space available for "real" use.

Why shouldn't I disable it?

Did you mean that I should disable and then enable it again?
 

Namtaro

macrumors regular
Dec 4, 2011
135
0
Yeah, disable and enable. Say you're on the road and accidentally delete a file... since you didn't bring your timemachine backup, the local one's your only hope!

I keep it on and only disable it when I'm about to transfer a lot of files.

Yes, it should be deleting the local backup when you've backed up to your time machine drive... but it doesn't for some reason. I've only noticed it since mountain lion right around the time I switched to a 256gb ssd and was more concerned about space.
 
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