Cleaning up my hard drive
Topics/tags: Miscellaneous, organization, Mac
macOS Mojave just came out. I was toying with the idea of upgrading to Mojave. Why? I’m not entirely sure. I’ve been happy with Sierra and never bothered to upgrade to High Sierra. But Mojave seems to have some cool new features, such as Dark Mode [1]. But that’s not the subject of this musing.
In preparing for a potential upgrade, I decided that it would be a good idea to start cleaning up my internal hard drive [2]. Now, a complete re-organization of my hard drive is likely to be a long and arduous task. I don’t do very well at keeping my digital life organized. But I can try to get rid of some cruft. Rocket Yard has some tips. One of the more important tips is to use OmniDiskSweeper to identify some of the high-usage spots on the disk [3]. The UI is pretty simple; here’s a screenshot from after I’d done some of my cleanup.
Here’s some of what I discovered as I explored my disk usage.
I still had a VM [4] from the old 151. I hope to never use a VM in 151
again. That’s 9 GB to free up immediately. Of course, after erasing
it, I said to myself Hmmm … I wonder if I had anything on that particular
machine; I should have checked.
Fortunately, it’s stored away on my
Time Machine backup if I ever need it [5].
I also have a VM from the old CS 50 when I was using it for an
experimental online learning
course. I haven’t touched that in three
and a half years. That can go. I’m not even sure it’s worth copying
out of time machine.
Adobe has been taking up a lot of space, not only in
m;y Applications folder (6.4 GB, most of which is my old
CS 6 suite) but also in /Library/Application Support
(another 2 GB). The latter has cruft from way too many
old versions of Adobe software. Even Adobe tells me to clean it
out.
So I’m removing all of my Adobe stuff and starting from scratch with my
obscenely cheap Adobe Creative Cloud license.
Looking in the Library, I discovered that I set my cache for Amazon Music much too large. I don’t need to store all of my recent streams, so I dropped that to 1GB. I also seemed to have about 5 GB of Amazon music presumably from when I was doing the big download. But most of that music is on an external drive. Is it a duplicate? Yup, it appears to be a duplicate. That can go.
What about the applications? I’ve already cleared out the Adobe products and installed Photoshop CC. That’s the biggest disk hog. But why is Microsoft Word 2.3 GB? Microsoft Office 2011 was under 1.5 GB for all of the applications. I found one answer: It stores its own copy of things like Fonts, rather than relying on the Mac system.
Other ways I can tell that I don’t clean through my disk very often. It appears I got a USB stick in from Sun in 2010 [6] and immediately copied everything to my Mac, including a version of Alice 3 for Windows. I’m pretty sure that I didn’t touch any of those files since 2010. That’s another 1.8 GB to free up.
Here’s a strange thing, at least from my perspective: I seem to have Anaconda Navigator in my home directory. As far as I can tell, it’s a helpful container for Python applications. Why didn’t I put it in applications? I’m not sure. In any case, I probably installed it when I was playing with the design of a data science course. But I don’t need it right now; I can trash it.
Why is Google Drive taking up over 5 GB when I try to limit the amount I automatically copy from Google Drive to my laptop? Ah, I see. It’s almost all from the summer code camps. But what in the summer camps? The 2016 summer camp only required 57.4 MB of disk space; the 2017 camp requires 4.4 GB. It appears that we decided to add photos to the rest of the camp materials. I can edit the preferences for Backup and Sync from Google [7] to ignore the photo folders.
I was surprised to discover that a folder called UDL Workshop 2017
was
occupying a large amount of space. It turns out that I’d downloaded
ISOs for two different accessible Linux installations while at the workshop.
I don’t think I’ve played with either of them since. And they’ve almost
certainly been upgraded since them. They can go away, too.
I’m amazed at how much is hidden away in the Library folder. There’s
something called Suggestions which occupies 1.9 GB, most in a folder
called pending
. A Web search reveals very little about that folder,
or even whether it’s safe to delete it. I have 3.0 GB of Caches and
6.4 of Application Support. Firefox occupies 1.1 GB of the caches, and
CoverScout 3 is using an astounding 1.7 GB of space under application
support. I don’t know how much of that is necessary; I’ll clear those
out some other time.
I see from the image above that I have a .android
folder. It appears
that’s from 2015, when I was using Android Studio. I’m not sure whether
or not I need to keep the keys that live in that folder, which means that
I’m going to keep them. But I can certainly clear out the cache.
After all that work, I now have nearly 69 GB free. Given that I use a 256 GB SSD that is traditionally close to capacity, that’s pretty good. I’ll think about upgrading to Mojave another day.
I wonder if I’ll ever get everything organized and indexed.
[1] It’s rare, but once in a while, I’m a sucker for silly UI things.
[2] It’s really an SSD. I’m just accustomed to referring to my internal drive as a hard drive.
[3] Yes, I know that I could use du
on the command line. OmniDiskSweeper
has a friendlier UI and gathers all the data in one spot.
[4] Virtual Machine.
[5] Time Machine does eventually clear out old backups. Maybe I should copy it out of that backup, just in case.
[6] Back when Sun still existed.
[7] I did not name the application. Why can’t they call it Google Drive
?
Version 1.0 released 2018-09-28.
Version 1.0.1 of 2018-09-29.