The solution you find yourself is actually treating the symptoms rather than the root cause. As expected, the same problem will appear again before long.
com.apple.coresymbolicationd is a product that uses symbols to replace memory addresses. This behavior often occurs after an application crashes, so its main function is logging/crash reporting/debugging. Generally speaking, all files located under System/User Caches are used to help speed up the system (everyone knows the role of cache). Even if you delete it, it will be written again when it is time to write.
In most cases, the normal operation of the application will not cause this file (folder) to be innocently huge. It is usually caused by a certain software(s) crashing frequently, so you should take a closer look at your console (I mean It's a console application in Mac OS, not a terminal) log to find out what causes it to crash frequently. Only after the symptoms are cured can you feel at ease.
The Mac system is still very stable. I have an MBP from 2009, which I only reinstalled once in 10.8. It is still running fine until now. Developing good habits will greatly improve the stability and lifespan of your system. .
Mac其实并不比Windows产生的垃圾少,这块主要也是各种软件所产生的缓存、临时文件等其他数据。而Mac既没有像iOS一样数据与应用绑定存储,删应用及删数据,也没有像Android或Windows一样有强大的垃圾清软件及其垃圾清理库的支持。所以目前Mac is relatively useless. It can only clean up junk from some applications such as systems, browsers, and emails, but it is basically ineffective. To clean it completely, you still need to format and reinstall it. However, the new version of macOS is said to have powerful capacity optimization. The press conference said it was very impressive, but I don’t know if the actual effect is really as advertised.
I have also encountered it. Mine is that there are many system core dumps in the /core directory. After clearing them, they will be generated again, filling up the space. The system core dump needs to be turned off.
After reading your solution, it is not directly related to the system. If there is a process in Windows that keeps writing to the disk, it will not work.
It has been solved, solution: http://blog.csdn.net/ylgwhyh/article/details/51759732
The solution you find yourself is actually treating the symptoms rather than the root cause. As expected, the same problem will appear again before long.
com.apple.coresymbolicationd
is a product that uses symbols to replace memory addresses. This behavior often occurs after an application crashes, so its main function is logging/crash reporting/debugging. Generally speaking, all files located under System/User Caches are used to help speed up the system (everyone knows the role of cache). Even if you delete it, it will be written again when it is time to write.In most cases, the normal operation of the application will not cause this file (folder) to be innocently huge. It is usually caused by a certain software(s) crashing frequently, so you should take a closer look at your console (I mean It's a console application in Mac OS, not a terminal) log to find out what causes it to crash frequently. Only after the symptoms are cured can you feel at ease.
The Mac system is still very stable. I have an MBP from 2009, which I only reinstalled once in 10.8. It is still running fine until now. Developing good habits will greatly improve the stability and lifespan of your system. .
The junk cleaning software on
Mac
其实并不比Windows
产生的垃圾少,这块主要也是各种软件所产生的缓存、临时文件等其他数据。而Mac
既没有像iOS
一样数据与应用绑定存储,删应用及删数据,也没有像Android
或Windows
一样有强大的垃圾清软件及其垃圾清理库的支持。所以目前Mac
is relatively useless. It can only clean up junk from some applications such as systems, browsers, and emails, but it is basically ineffective. To clean it completely, you still need to format and reinstall it. However, the new version of macOS is said to have powerful capacity optimization. The press conference said it was very impressive, but I don’t know if the actual effect is really as advertised.I usually use cleanmymac, you can give it a try, but you need to download a cracked version, otherwise you can only clean part of it
How about ccleaner?
I have been using cleanmymac and it is very handy. I recommend using it.
I have also encountered it. Mine is that there are many system core dumps in the /core directory. After clearing them, they will be generated again, filling up the space. The system core dump needs to be turned off.
After reading your solution, it is not directly related to the system. If there is a process in Windows that keeps writing to the disk, it will not work.