"Free Space" Partition

I deleted my windows 7 partition and it left a partition called "Free Space" that i am unable to delete or resize. I have booted from cd, and i tried to delete the partition and resize my MAC partition. I was unable to make any changes to the "Free Space" partition. I have attempted most of the mainstream fixes for partition problems. I would like to go about fixing this problem without erasing any data. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance.

The free space entry is just that; space not used by any existing partition. If the Mac partition is above it in the list, drag the slider down as far as it will go. If the Mac partition is below it in the list, create a new Mac partition, clone the old one to it if it's large enough, boot from it, delete the old partition, and see above.
(54195)

Similar Messages

  • 50GB of Free Space Partition

    Macintosh HD Split into 2 separate partitions:
    Macintosh HD
    Free Space
    Can't join the two together nor can I change Free Space into anything else (Mac OS Extended, etc.)
    I have a MacBook Pro - 500GB (OS X 10.9.3)

    Tried that. I can't move them or do anything with the Free Space partition.

  • Restoring to a one partition drive after mistake of making a free space partition

    Anyone know how to retore your os x to one partiton after making a mistake of making a free space partition in disk utlilty? I tried to revert back to original in disk utility and it won't let me. When I tried to partition inside the free space, It just did nothing, and when I tried to exit out of disk utility, it said their where unsaved partitions. And it won't SAVE! The free space that i'm trying to get back would really help as I am a little low on disk space. I'm on a late 2012 macbook pro retina display 13 inch running OS X Mavericks 10.9.2. Feedback would be excellent. Thx!
    Bottom part that is bordered with blue is what I want to get rid of.

    Willio_A,
    if no diagonal lines appear in the lower-right corner of the “OS X Mavericks” partition when you’d clicked on it, then alternatively you could just quit out of Disk Utility and not save any changes that you’d made during your session. Or are there partition changes that you’d made in Disk Utility which you are trying to save?

  • HELP - Removing free space partition

    Hi Everyone
    I have a 50GB Free Space partition on my MacBook Pro and I wanted to delete it so that I could have those 50GB back to my Macintosh HD. But I can't delete it on Disk Utility because it says it contains CoreStorage physical volumes and it doesn't show up on the diskutil partitions list. What can I do?
    (Please click the image for full res)

    First hold command and r keys and boot into Lion Recovery Partition and use Disk Utility to Repair your drive first.
    Then see if you can fix the partition and reclaim the space that way.
    I think this is a glitch of some sort exclusively to Lion.
    CoreStorage I is stored in the Lion Recovery Partition and one of it's features is full disk encryption, of the entire drive, why it's showing 50GB is beyond me.
    I suspect something is wrong and your drive needs to be repaired from the Lion Recovery Partition, then perhaps it will show the true size and then you can click on the big MacIntosh HD box and use the corner draggie thing to grab as much as that 50GB remaining as possible.
    Do you have Filevault enabled on the drive?

  • Unable to claim 100G Free Space Partition after Deleting Yosemite Beta

    When I was running Mavericks I had a single large 500G volume (no partitions). The I installed Yosemite Beta on a 100G partition. After Yosemite was released it reinstalled over the Mavericks on Partition 1. When I tried to delete Yosemite Beta partition to reclaim the space to evert to original form - I have been stuck with a 100G Free Space partition that I can do nothing with  - neither make it into a usable volume to store data nor be able to merge it into the original partition. I am hitting up against the space restrictions dn desperate now - I have see Loner T do an awesome job with his advice on this forum for similar issues. Very grateful for help. I also purchase iPartition but it was a waste as it says that it does not have write access to the disk.

    Here are my
    Diskutil list
    Dads-Mac:~ sunkap$ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.3 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI EFI                     209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS                         399.4 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Mac                    *399.4 GB   disk1
                                     Logical Volume on disk0s2
                                     D30FABC9-09A2-47B8-B008-7AE0CBB42164
                                     Unencrypted
    Dads-Mac:~ sunkap$

  • Free Space Partition on Mac HD - 3TB Fusion Drive Late 2013 iMac

    I have managed to create a free space partition on my Mac HD that I now cant get rid of. This happened when I was trying to run bootcamp and during the Windows install I created a new partition that wiped the bootcamp partition and turned it into free space. Have attached a screen shot of my HD. I have already tried re-formatting the free space partition but nothing happens, just goes back to free space. Any help/ideas would be appreciated. Thanks!
    Late 2013 iMac-3TB Fusion drive

    Try highlighting the top space and there should be a arrow of sorts in the bottom right hand corner, like this.
    Click and hold on it and drag it down to take up the free space.
    If there is no 45º lines then you have separated that space from the Logical Storage Volume that makes up the Fusion drive and it can't be put back in without wiping out the Fusion drive and recreating it. At least no way that I know of.

  • How to delete "Free Space" Partition?

    I partitioned my MacBook Pro into 2 volumes so I could dual boot Mavericks and Yosemite Developer Preview. After testing Yosemite, I found out that it was stable enough to run on my main partition. I installed it on my main partition replacing Mavericks and deleted the second partition which included Yosemite. While deleting, somehow I was left with an empty partition called "Free Space" which I cannot delete.
    I am pretty sure the problem isn't related to Yosemite being a developer preview as it could've happened under an previous stable OS. How can I merge my "Free Space" partition with Macintosh HD?
    MacBook Pro with Retina display 13-inch Late 2013
    2.8GHz Intel Core i7
    16GB RAM
    Intel Iris graphics
    512GB SSD
    OS X Yosemite Developer Preview 2

    If you select the top partition, does ////// lines appear in the bottom right hand corner? If so try selecting them and dragging downward. Boot into the Recovery Volume (command - R) during a restart and try it there.

  • Free space partition - nothing helped

    Hi, I had FAT partition on my drive, but since I tried to delete it I have only free space partition.
    I read few tutorials but I can't remove it or reformat it. Can you help me please?

    Are you unable to extend the Disk partition to take up the free space? If not, then you will need to repartition the entire drive from scratch:
    Install Mavericks, Lion/Mountain Lion Using Internet Recovery
    Be sure you backup your files to an external drive or second internal drive because the following procedure will remove everything from the hard drive.
    Boot to the Internet Recovery HD:
    Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND-OPTION- R keys until a globe appears on the screen. Wait patiently - 15-20 minutes - until the Recovery main menu appears.
    Partition and Format the hard drive:
    Select Disk Utility from the main menu and click on the Continue button.
    After DU loads select your newly installed hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed. Quit DU and return to the main menu.
    Reinstall Lion/Mountain Lion. Mavericks: Select Reinstall Lion/Mountain Lion, Mavericks and click on the Install button. Be sure to select the correct drive to use if you have more than one.
    Note: You will need an active Internet connection. I suggest using Ethernet if possible because it is three times faster than wireless.

  • "Free Space" Partition disaster on new Mountain Lion iMac

    "Help"
    I just received a new 27 inch iMac as a replacement for my old machine, which apparently disntegrated during warranty. In setting it up, I tried to create a small partition on the hard drive to run a Linux distro for testing purposes. It seems that with the non-system disc versions of the OS this has become more complex, and what I recall as an easy process turned into a disaster where 2 of the 3 TBs on the machine are locked out as "free space". I humbly retreat from any thoughts of working with partitions on this machine - I just want to clean it up and get it to a one-partition state for music and graphic design production. I have a backup. Here is a snapshot of this nightmare:
    I also note that at the top level, where I am used to seeing "Hitachi" (or whomever makes the hard drive) it says Macintosh HD. That can't be right?
    Here is a diskutil list report:
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *3.0 TB     disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         1.3 TB     disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Hard Drive             *1.3 TB     disk1
    I want to get rid of disk1, I guess, and make disk0 correspond to the 3.0 TB physical volume, not a "Logical Volume Family".
      Name:         Macintosh HD
        Size:         1255995588608 B (1.3 TB)
        Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume 27B24C33-92E7-4DC1-99B0-165BF47601AE
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    0
        |   Disk:     disk0s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     1255995588608 B (1.3 TB)
        |
        +-> Logical Volume Family 4FDA0589-59C5-4C94-AFC1-F7E82B21A450
            Encryption Status:       Unlocked
            Encryption Type:         None
            Conversion Status:       NoConversion
            Conversion Direction:    -none-
            Has Encrypted Extents:   No
            Fully Secure:            No
            Passphrase Required:     No
            |
            +-> Logical Volume 74E89BB3-AEBF-477C-B7B0-47EE71BC5BB0
                Disk:               disk1
                Status:             Online
                Size (Total):       1255676813312 B (1.3 TB)
                Size (Converted):   -none-
                Revertible:         No
                LV Name:            Hard Drive
                Volume Name:        Hard Drive
                Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    Any thoughts? restarting to Command-R seems like it would not address the partition problem at all. I suppose I could put it in target mode and use my laptop to wipe it, but I'm not sure that would address the partitions either. I am completely comfortable with removing the built-in system recovery area if necessary, as I made a system mount on a USB stick.

    Two cloning programs:
    SuperDuper
    Carbon Copy Cloner

  • How to remove "Free Space" partition on MacBook Pro

    So I made a dual boot thing on my MBP, one contained Lion 10.7.4 and the other I'm currently using has Mountain Lion 10.8. (I was afraid to like harm my computer so I dual booted first and then erased the 10.7.4 partition.) Anyways ever since I erased the partition it was left with free space. How can I claim that memory back?

    Open the Disk Utility in the /Applications/Utilities/ folder and click on the drive.
    If there's a partition above that free space in the list, move the slider at the bottom of it as far down as it will go and click Apply.
    If there isn't, create a partition in that space, clone the contents of the partition below it there, restart into the newly-created partition, and delete the old one.
    (86498)

  • Free Space Partitioning

    I deleted a drive partition, but I can't get the free space to re-incorporate back into the Macintosh HD; how do I get the free space back on to the Macintosh HD? Thanks.

    Partitioning a hard drive:
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcp_homepage/partitioning_tiger.html
    To resize (or delete) an existing partition without losing data, you will need to use, for example, iPartition:
    http://www.coriolis-systems.com/iPartition.php

  • Cant allocate free space -partition

    So this is my problem -->  http://i48.tinypic.com/2hf54du.png
    I want to put all the space in 1 partition, but I cant. Help please!

    JUST LIVED A NIGHMARE!!!  Need to share so other people dont get in same trouble
    After having created a "boot disk" I booted from it and chose the resizing option I wanted.
    AND THEN...it froze on "unmounting disks"..I mean froze for at least 20 minutes. So i closed all up.
    While rebooting, I saw that I had no hard drive. lol. This software unmounted my drive!! I tried to repair it
    with original mac os x dvd, but this one see the disk as wiped...
    Not knowing what to do, I booted again from ipartition disk...Then waited a long long time and  this unmounting thing dissapeared and my disk was mounted again.
    Now stuck with " couldnt modify partition map because file system verication failed" ...

  • Hard Disk Free Space Remove

    Hello,
    I am new in MAC OS. I bought a MAC yesterday. I wanted to create a partition on initial Hard Disk. For this i used Disk Utility. And created a partition with FREE SPACE.
    Now i hard disk becomes half. i can't remove FREE SPACE partition. Please help me.
    Thanks

    Regarding Monolingual..... 
    There is a warning for *native English speakers*. Make sure you keep BOTH English and English (United States). 

  • Logical Volume Group and Logical Partition not matching up in free space

    I was dual booting Windows 7 and Mountain Lion. Through Disk Utility, I removed the Windows 7 Partition and expanded the HFS+ partition to encompass the entire hard drive. However, the Logical Volume Group does not think that I have that extra free space. The main problem is that I cannot resize my partition. I am wanting to dual boot Ubuntu with this. Any ideas? Any help is appreciated. I will post some screenshots with the details. Furthermore, here are some terminal commands I ran: /dev/disk0
    #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER
    0: GUID_partition_scheme *250.1 GB disk0
    1: EFI 209.7 MB disk0s1
    2: Apple_CoreStorage 249.2 GB disk0s2
    3: Apple_Boot Recovery HD 650.0 MB disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
    #: TYPE NAME SIZE IDENTIFIER
    0: Apple_HFS MAC OS X *248.9 GB disk1 Filesystem 1024-blocks Used Available Capacity iused ifree %iused Mounted on
    /dev/disk1 243031288 153028624 89746664 64% 38321154 22436666 63% /
    devfs 189 189 0 100% 655 0 100% /dev
    map -hosts 0 0 0 100% 0 0 100% /net
    map auto_home 0 0 0 100% 0 0 100% /home CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group 52A4D825-B134-4C33-AC8B-39A02BA30522
    =========================================================
    Name: MAC OS X
    Size: 249199587328 B (249.2 GB)
    Free Space: 16777216 B (16.8 MB)
    |
    +-< Physical Volume 6D7A0A36-1D86-4A30-8EB5-755D375369D9
    | ----------------------------------------------------
    | Index: 0
    | Disk: disk0s2
    | Status: Online
    | Size: 249199587328 B (249.2 GB)
    |
    +-> Logical Volume Family FDC4568F-4E25-46AB-885A-CBA6287309B6
    Encryption Status: Unlocked
    Encryption Type: None
    Conversion Status: Converting
    Conversion Direction: backward
    Has Encrypted Extents: Yes
    Fully Secure: No
    Passphrase Required: No
    |
    +-> Logical Volume BB2662B7-58F3-401C-B889-F264D79E68B4
    Disk: disk1
    Status: Online
    Size (Total): 248864038912 B (248.9 GB)
    Size (Converted): 130367356928 B (130.4 GB)
    Revertible: Yes (unlock and decryption required)
    LV Name: MAC OS X
    Volume Name: MAC OS X
    Content Hint: Apple_HFS

    Here is another try via the command line:
    dhcp-10-201-238-248:~ KyleWLawrence$ diskutil coreStorage resizeVolume BB2662B7-58F3-401C-B889-F264D79E68B4 210g
    Started CoreStorage operation
    Checking file system
    Performing live verification
    Checking Journaled HFS Plus volume
    Checking extents overflow file
    Checking catalog file
    Incorrect block count for file 2012.12.11.asl
    (It should be 390 instead of 195)
    Checking multi-linked files
    Checking catalog hierarchy
    Checking extended attributes file
    Checking volume bitmap
    Checking volume information
    Invalid volume free block count
    (It should be 21713521 instead of 21713716)
    The volume MAC OS X was found corrupt and needs to be repaired
    Error: -69845: File system verify or repair failed

  • How to create a partition using the free space of an existing[SOLVED]

    Hi Guys,
    Since I could not install fifa 09 using wine on linux, I need to create a partition where I can install windows first in order to install fifa 09 on it. How can I create a partition using the rest free space of my , for example, /home partition?How can I do it in a secure way (meaning without doing something to my existing archlinux installation files and system files) ?
    Thanks.
    Please see this post:
    https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=109402
    Last edited by Archie_Enthusiasm (2010-12-08 19:23:46)

    Use Parted Magic. But you *should* backup any important files just in case, regardless of method you use. You never know. Someone could unplug your computer, a power surge might happen, etc. A cousin of mine actually did something similar while I was gaming, the extension cord has a red button which he "accidentally" pressed. I would've cracked his skull had he done it while resizing a partition.
    Anyway, the partitioning scheme should be the first thing you do when you decide go this route (dual booting). I remember about a year ago I forced myself to use Linux by formatting the entire drive to ext4, except for the 2 GB + 20 GB ntfs partitions. It was what kick-started me on this path. Here's my partitioning scheme for both computers, maybe you'll get an idea and do something similar:
    Older computer:
    2 GB ntfs - MicroXP
    8 GB ext4 - Arch Linux + Home dir (to keep the dot files organized in one place)
    20 GB ntfs - games partition
    Rest is for media, formatted as ext3 with inode 128 (so it can be loaded as Read-Only in Windows too via Ext2fsd so they won't be affected in case of a virus infection)
    New computer:
    20 GB Windows 7
    10 GB Arch Linux + home dir
    50 GB games partition
    Rest of the space is ext4 mounted to /media
    Note that they're all primary partitions for remembering easier (sda1, sda2, sda3, sda4) instead of a combination of primary and extended which would probably look like sda1, sda5, sda6, sda7, etc.
    Last edited by DSpider (2010-12-03 13:02:26)

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