
- #MAC SYSTEM STORAGE TOO BIG BECAUSE OF CARBON COPY CLONER DRIVERS#
- #MAC SYSTEM STORAGE TOO BIG BECAUSE OF CARBON COPY CLONER FULL#
You must dedicate a volume to your bootable backup. Were unable to leverage the SafetyNet feature, and its no longer appropriate to store other data on the backup volume. Carbon Copy Cloner (donationWare, www.bombich. I see almost 90 gigs of that stuff in your screenshot. As of macOS Big Sur, were required to use Apples APFS replicator to establish a bootable clone of an APFS volume group. You should always leave at least 5GB of free space on a startup drive so that. Otherwise, delete some old games and apps you don't play anymore. If so, check out Disk Cleanup, and even choose "compress this disk to save space" to get some storage back.
#MAC SYSTEM STORAGE TOO BIG BECAUSE OF CARBON COPY CLONER FULL#
Those "system files" seem to be including your macOS partition as well as BootCamp, which shouldn't be happening.Ĭuriously, if you go into the Windows Explorer and click on "This PC", you should see "BootCamp (C:)" with the correct size and usage of your BootCamp partition that is also reflected in Disk Utility on the macOS side.Ĭhances are, if you're running out of space, then the "BootCamp (C:)" bar should be full in Windows Explorer.

Did you give your Windows partition 465 GB (500) of your hard drive space? My guess is no, as you most likely got a 500gb SSD with your Mac, right? Analyse and clean clean the component store - see Analyze Component Store (WinSxS folder) in Windows 10. The primary advantage of Migration Assistant over Carbon Copy Cloner is that Migration Assistant comprehends the user Home folder internal structure as preferred by. Numerous functions, such as creating a bootable copy of the hard drive or automatic backups at set times, as well as a beautiful, structured user interface make the backup app an interesting super duper and SmartBackup Alternative.

#MAC SYSTEM STORAGE TOO BIG BECAUSE OF CARBON COPY CLONER DRIVERS#
Run Driver Store Explorer - set to show old drivers and delete the old ones. Carbon Copy Cloner, or CCC for short, is backup software for the Apple Mac that you can test for 30 days free of charge. For example, look at the size of your whole system. I would do this from an admin account: Run Disk Clean as admin. In that case, use it for both backup and extra. I think this system files is taking your whole drive into account, not just the BootCamp partition. It'll cost you from 80 and up, but you should be able to get an SSD that's larger than your internal drive. APFS backups are faster, and because they can copy changed blocks rather than having to copy whole files, they are more economical in terms of space too.
