![]() I personally think it's a better idea to just be aware of what's on your system and/or learn how to dig into Activity Monitor and recognize what should and shouldn't be there. ![]() So, just using your system as usual should resolve any fragmenting issues that arise.Īnother idea could be that you have some kind of software crufting up your system and running in the background that you don't need, and doing a system reinstall from scratch and then restoring only your user and application files will pass over anything in that category. ![]() However, OS X for a while now has had the ability to defragment on-the-fly when it notices file fragments above a certain threshold. There is some truth to this, as files on disk become more fragmented with ongoing use, and rewriting the entire directory structure at the filesystem level will cause each file to be written all at once in consecutive blocks. The idea behind this could be that causing all of the files to be rewritten with resolve any fragmenting issues that are present on your hard drive.
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