Skipped 2/2 repairs of this type in total Skipped 5/5 repairs of this type in total The volume /dev/rdisk1s6 appears to be OKĮrror: refcnt of dstream id object (id 1246626) less than expected The volume /dev/rdisk1s5 appears to be OK The volume /dev/rdisk1s4 appears to be OK The volume /dev/rdisk1s3 appears to be OK The volume /dev/rdisk1s2 was found to be corrupt and needs to be repaired The volume /dev/rdisk1s1 appears to be OKĮrror: refcnt (1) of dstream id object (id 1246626) is less than expected (2)Įrror: refcnt (1) of dstream id object (id 1247707) is less than expected (2)Įrror: refcnt (1) of dstream id object (id 7540510) is less than expected (2)Įrror: refcnt (1) of dstream id object (id 8451233) is less than expected (2)Įrror: refcnt (1) of dstream id object (id 9838001) is less than expected (2)Įrror: dstream (id 120785108) does not have an associated dstream id objectĮrror: alloced_size (1613824) of dstream (id 120785108) does not match calculated size (0) The specific APFS Physical Store being resized is disk0s2 Resizing APFS Container designated by APFS Container Reference disk1 However when using the " sudo diskutil apfs resizeContainer disk0s2 0" command, I get the following output in Terminal:Īligning grow delta to 79.263.285.248 bytes and targeting a new physical store size of 429.316.349.952 bytesĭetermined the maximum size for the targeted physical store of this APFS Container to be 429.316.349.952 bytes Sudo diskutil apfs resizeContainer disk0s2 0 I then used the following commands: df -h The free space is now visible in the macOS Disk Utility: I successfully used the MiniTool Partition wizard to make the Boot Camp partition smaller. I followed this tutorial, but I'm struggling with the last step. This can be accomplish by booting to Windows Recovery Environment (Windows RE) and entering the command below.I have a Boot Camp partition that I wanted to make smaller, so I would have more space on my main macOS container. Note: Before attempting to move the Windows partition, the Windows chkdsk command should be applied to the NTFS volume in this partition. One disadvantage is this tool has to be installed in Windows and therefore will still exist on the drive after you are finished moving Windows. One advantage is any existing keyboard and mouse (or similar device) can be used. To move Windows, the Mac reboots and performs the move without user interaction. One advantage is this tool does not have to be installed into Windows. However, if you can boot from a Ubuntu installer flash drive, then only use of a mouse is required. One disadvantage is the keyboard and/or mouse may be need to be wired to use this tool. If you build the bootable USB flash drive using the zip file downloaded from GParted, then both a keyboard and a mouse (or similar device) is required. After booting from the flash drive, the GParted tool can be used to move the Windows partition. A Linux based bootable USB flash drive can be created containing this tool. According to the other post, there are two possible compatible free tools available. However, not all are compatible with macOS. There are third party tools that can move Windows partitions. To add the remaining free space back to the partition containing macOS, the partition containing Windows would have to be first moved to the end of the drive. If the above commands are completed and the Mac is restarted, then your question will become a duplicate of the question Missing around 20 GB of Space on MacBook, at least in terms of a solution. If you have an older Mac which legacy BIOS boots Windows, then you should should not use the answer below. Note: The answer below applies to Macs which UEFI boot Windows. Note: These commands may need to be prepended with a sudo. If Windows has completed installation and working correctly, then you can delete this partition. The partition is suppose to be deleted during the installation of Windows. The OSXRESERVED partition ( disk0s3) is created by the Boot Camp Assistant to hold the files needed to install Windows.
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