Does Mac OS need defrag?

cheez

Golden Member
Nov 19, 2010
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Hey ya.:colbert:

I just got a new MacBook pro laptop and I love it.

I am guessing it's got Mac OS 10.x? You call it Lion or something?...

Does it need a defrag?? How do I go about doing it.^_^

please help!:oops:
 

cheez

Golden Member
Nov 19, 2010
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ChAoTiCpInOy

Diamond Member
Jun 24, 2006
6,442
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I remember the one time I had to actually do a defrag, was when I was trying to put Windows on my MBP. Other than that, I quite enjoy not having to defrag and letting the OS do it for me.
 

daws91

Junior Member
Jan 5, 2012
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0
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I never did it till now and am still running pretty good. So you shouldn't have to worry about it for at least the first two years.
 

Tyranicus

Senior member
Aug 28, 2007
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6
81
So for whatever reason, this article no longer exists.

Actually, it does still exist. For the last month or so, Apple's knowledge base articles have not worked when you link directly to them. If you refresh the error page, it does load.
 

HFS+

Senior member
Dec 19, 2011
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no it dosent and here is why
HFS+ automatically defrags files under 20mb that meet certain conditions (i dont remember what they are)

It has delayed allocation which combines writes all in one and the filesystem will know the exact size needed to allocate the file

HFS+ also has hot file zone which defragments files that are constantly accessed.

HFS+ also does not allocate files in small gaps like NTFS does, instead HFS+ tends to allocate files in big free space gaps.
 

Tyranicus

Senior member
Aug 28, 2007
914
6
81
no it dosent and here is why
HFS+ automatically defrags files under 20mb that meet certain conditions (i dont remember what they are)

It has delayed allocation which combines writes all in one and the filesystem will know the exact size needed to allocate the file

HFS+ also has hot file zone which defragments files that are constantly accessed.

HFS+ also does not allocate files in small gaps like NTFS does, instead HFS+ tends to allocate files in big free space gaps.
Yeah, you will generally not see performance degradation from fragmented files in OS X because the files are not actually fragmented. The only time you would need to truly defragment is if you need to repartition the drive.