![]() The big blue circle indicates the Fusion Drive in this iMac, and there’s currently just one partition and logical volume that makes up the whole of the drive - Macintosh HD, at 2.12 TB. With the drive (not the volume) selected, clicking on the Partition button displays this window: (Disk Utility, with the Partition button highlighted)Īs you can see above, I’ve gone ahead and clicked on the drive named “Fusion Drive” - it’s currently partitioned into one big volume called “Macintosh HD”. If it’s not currently highlighted, it’s because Disk Utility usually shows the current Mac volume information, not the Mac disk information. The partition tool is one of six buttons at the top of the Disk Utility window (see image below). ![]() Or, since you’re running macOS Sierra, you can just click on the Siri icon and say “Launch Disk Utility”. ![]() Next, there’s a keyboard shortcut to get to the Utilities folder - Command + Shift + U from the Finder. First, one can go to Finder > Go > Utilities, then double-click on the Disk Utility icon. During the macOS Sierra beta, my “test machine” was partitioned with Mac OS X El Capitan on one partition and macOS Sierra beta on another.ĭisk Utility can be launched several different ways.
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