Volumes/Colossus/Library/Application Supportĥ.4G.
Users/mmorin/Maildir/Cantab/Deleted Items/curĤ.4G. Users/mmorin/Maildir/Cantab/Deleted Itemsģ.2G. Volumes/Colossus/Library/ContainersĢ.6G. Users/mmorin/Library/Caches/HomebrewĢ.5G. Users/mmorin/Music/iTunes/iTunes MediaĢ.4G. Users/mmorin/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/BackupĢ.1G. Users/mmorin/Library/Application Support/MobileSyncĢ.1G. Volumes/Colossus/Library/Application Support/MobileSync/BackupĢ.1G. Volumes/Colossus/Library/Application Support/MobileSyncĢ.0G. Nothing catches my eye from this list: $ sudo du -h | sort -hĢ.0G. I ran this du command on /Volumes/Macintosh HD, and here is the list of folders with over 2 GB. I also know about How can I figure out what's slowly eating my drive space? and tried some of the tools there.
Now I have the same issue and cannot find the culprit. Note: A few years ago I asked Terminal command to identify and clear runaway system storage and solved it with OmniDiskSweeper. How can I find the culprit of runaway system storage? The alternative is to keep moving files to an external drive and clear disk space until there is nothing left and I reinstall. OmniDiskSweeper fails to find the large files: the total of files is about 43 GB out of 110 GB used: I click on Manage from the desktop and see that system storage is taking 84 GB on a 128 GB SSD drive: Older terminal scrollback contents may be automatically discarded to conserve VM backing store.: Every few days now, I clear 1-2 GB from my hard drive and still get this alert of low disk space on the desktop: