
ZDNET key takeaways
- There’s no need to purchase pricey apps to clean your Mac.
- Mole is a command-line tool that does a great job.
- Mole is free and can be installed with Homebrew.
Because I work with a lot of video, my Mac drives can fill quickly. When that happens, things can get a bit tricky. The machine might slow down, or I won’t be able to create or save files.
Before that situation arises, I like to clean my Mac drives of unnecessary items. When I do that task, I turn to a handy command-line tool called Mole.
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Mole deep cleans and optimizes your Mac, without you having to install expensive solutions. Sure, if you’re not used to working with the command line, you might feel a bit daunted… don’t. Mole is actually quite easy to use.
I want to show you how to install and use Mole.
Installing Homebrew
What you’ll need: To install and use Mole, you’ll need an up-to-date Mac. That’s it. Let’s get cleaning.
The first thing to do is click the Launch Pad icon on your dock, search for Terminal, and click to open the app.
To install Homebrew, issue the following command:
/ bin / bash -c “$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)”
Note: Remove the spaces after the first two / characters.
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If you’re running a Mac with Apple Silicon, you’ll need to run the following:
echo ‘eval “$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)”‘ >> ~/.zprofile
eval “$(/opt/homebrew/bin/brew shellenv)”
To run Homebrew, you’ll need to add the installed command to your $PATH, which is done with the following command:
echo “export PATH=/opt/homebrew/bin:$PATH” >> ~/.bash_profile && source ~/.bash_profile
You’re now ready to install Mole.
Installing Mole
Within the terminal app, install Mole with the command:
brew install mole
That should do the trick. You’re now ready to use Mole.
Using Mole
To use mole, issue the command:
mole
When Mole opens, you’ll see a text-based menu which lists:
- Clean
- Uninstall
- Optimize
- Analyze
- Status
First, select 1 (Clean), and you’ll then be prompted that the action requires sudo. Hit Enter on your keyboard, and you’ll be prompted for your sudo password.
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Mole will begin a deep scan of your system. Depending on how much data you have in your system, this could take some time. Give Mole time to complete the process.
When the scan completes, Mole will report on how much it cleaned. In my case, Mole cleared up 19.85GB of space. Yeah, it’s pretty effective.
You can also use Mole to optimize and analyze your system. The Mole optimizer does the following: rebuilds system databases, clears diagnostic logs, resets network services, cleans up swap files, and refreshes Spotlight indexing. Again, the optimization will take some time, so allow it to complete its task.
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After you done just these two things, you should find that your Mac runs better and has more free space.
Mole should be considered a must for those who like to keep their Macs free of unnecessary files and optimized to run efficiently.
Install this free app today.

