![]() If you do not maintain enough space for it to work properly, you will get kernel panics, beachballs, and finally, a corrupted disk. ![]() Every time you do anything at all, it needs to find space to write and/or find the file to read, so it works better if you maintain more continuous empty space - especially with SSDs which are written to in blocks. Well, you must remember that your disk/SSD is more than just storage space: it is the component that makes your device run. It seems APFS does a better job at managing free space on iOS than it does on macOS. Well, I'd say either this is a bug or an over zealous restriction in much the same way than slowing down iPhones was without warning the user when the battery was getting old. Now I manage to free up to 10 GB, but this is still not enough for Mojave. I used to have as little as 3-5 GB free space until Mojave and that was fine (from a user point of view I understand this may have stressed the SSD, but this is my SSD, it should not decide for me). It is simply not possible for Mojave to require that space needs to be freed every few minutes. ![]() ![]() On a 128 GB disk like mine, there are only a couple of files that you can remove, the others you need, hence the disk space issue. I'm sorry but this is not a quality answer.
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