WilliamL wrote:
You are right. When I first tried it in my Standard Account my admin password kept being rejected. So I then tried it in the Admin Account. I initially tried to do the combined delete/restart command listed above but that kept being rejected. I then tried just the delete command. But that was rejected. Something about trying it again "in root." Pass. But the restart command seemed to work.
What delete & restart command? I see nothing like that listed in this thread. The only "deletion" discussion I see was to remove a volume from the Spotlight Indexing block list.
Using "sudo" gives you "root" access, there is no reason to ever to enable the root user account. Never. Besides "root" on macOS no longer has master access to the OS due to all the privacy & security changes to macOS.
Switched back to my Standard Account. opened System Settings again. "No Joy." So I tried the restart command. Got a message saying I was not on the "sudo" list. So I went in search of how to get on the "sudo" list. Found the command "sudo username." Did that and then was able to restart the list. Opened System Settings again. And "No Joy."
People should not try add any user to the "sudo" list without a thorough understanding of the process and the risks. It is not simple to get it correct. I have researched it enough to understand the hidden risks and I know that I cannot do it correctly except for the most simple cases. Besides once you allow a Standard User extra privileges with "sudo", then that user is no longer a Standard User and may be get more admin/root access than intended.
I give up. Apple has beaten me. Thanks everyone for all the help and suggestions.
I wouldn't worry about the information in Storage Management since it can be incorrect and even misleading.
The only storage values that are important are the Free storage space value only shown in Disk Utility or the System Profiler. Ignore the "Available" storage value since it is very misleading and is not synonymous with Free.
If you are trying to transfer to another Mac, then the "Used" storage value becomes important since some configurations may have the "Used" storage space value larger than the physical storage due to how the APFS file system works.
If you are concerned about the amount of System Data being too large, then you there isn't much you can do about it. Many times the hidden APFS backup snapshots will be the reason as they can contain large amounts of data that has already been moved to external media or even deleted. Usually it takes about 24-48 hours before the Free storage space will reflect the deleted/moved data.
system data is so large that no more stor… - Apple Community
Many times people who are running out of Free storage space, it is because they don't have enough physical storage. Besides purchasing a computer with larger internal SSD, moving the large amounts of data to external media is the next best option.