tvdanax.blogg.se

Boot camp for mac el capitan
Boot camp for mac el capitan






boot camp for mac el capitan
  1. Boot camp for mac el capitan install#
  2. Boot camp for mac el capitan mod#
  3. Boot camp for mac el capitan drivers#
  4. Boot camp for mac el capitan update#

However, all seems to work fine now after a couple Win 10 update cycles.

Boot camp for mac el capitan drivers#

I use a wireless keyboard and mouse and do not have a USB keyboard so there were some delays from re-pairing to do the many restarts to Windows during the process - it also seems the Apple Windows Support drivers for wireless keyboard and mouse are less stable than the Windows 8.1 and 10 built-in drivers. Note, an 8.1 key used for a free upgrade is invalidated by the upgrade. The 10 upgrade was via the MS free online process after activating 8.1.

boot camp for mac el capitan boot camp for mac el capitan

Boot camp for mac el capitan install#

I used the Win 8.1 install USB, made with the mod'd BC, to boot the iMac from it via the (option key selection) firmware boot selector and did the 8.1 upgrade. This was because Win 8.1 would not install directly on my BC partition saying it could not use it because it had to be GPT for EFI machines, but Win 7 had no such trouble.Īfter installing Win 7 in the normal BC way. However, I had to start with a Win 7 install, then upgrade to Win 8.1 and finally to Win 10 via internet.

boot camp for mac el capitan

Boot camp for mac el capitan mod#

The BootCamp mod (listed in other posts) worked for me to get Windows 10 on my mid-2011 iMac 21.5. Just as information and hope it helps someone: Sudo codesign -fs - /Applications/Utilities/Boot\ Camp\ Assistant.appĪfter all this is done, you can re-enable Rootless System Integrity if you want by booting back into Recovery Mode, opening the Terminal, and entering "csrutil enable reboot" without quotes, then hit enter. You can fix this by going to the terminal and entering the following command: If so, eject it before running BCA.įor some people, BCA may fail to work after the plist change. Make sure the ISO image is on your desktop but is NOT open as a disk image. You should now have all 3 install options and be able to select your ISO image. Copy it back to the Contents folder under Boot Camp Assistant (requires username / password).Remove your Model Identifier under PreUSBBootSupportedModelsįormatting is important.It's safer to copy and paste a line, then edit it. Add your Boot ROM Version under DARequiredROMVersionsįormatting is important.Add your Model Identifier under 32BitSupportedModelsįormatting is important.Right click it and select 'Copy "ist"'.Click ist and go to File->Duplicate to make a backup (requires username / password).Go to the Utilities folder in the Finder, right click on Boot Camp Assistant, and click "Show Package Contents".Alter the Boot Camp Assistant plist (make sure BCA is closed before you do this).The MI and BRV are in the "Hardware Overview" of System Information.Go to the Apple Menu in the upper left and click "About This Mac".Look up your Model Identifier and Boot ROM Version:.Enter: "csrutil disable reboot" without quotes and hit enter.Once booted, click the Utilities menu at the top of the screen and select Terminal.Restart your Mac and hold down CMD + R to boot into Recovery Mode.This is a mind boggingly stupid restriction that is entirely artificial. I found that adding my model to ExternalInstallOnlyModels did the trick.There is a work around. Simply click the app, and go to File > Get Info, then at the bottom of the window that pops up, give yourself permission.Įdit 2: There are several places that might block / allow your mac model from creating an image. Just look for the USBBootSupportedModels key (if it says PreUSB, change it to just USB), then add a string with your computer's model identifier.Įdit: You may still have to give yourself permissions to the app after copying it, but the copy enables you to do just that. If you're using a text editor, it may look something like this. I copied it to my Downloads folder, edited the ist file to include my model identifier and it worked on the first try. Instead, simply copy Boot Camp Assistant to another folder, then you will be able to edit and use that copy. On El Capitan, you don't have permission to edit the ist file, and giving yourself that permission is not possible without disabling the rootless feature in terminal, which I would not recommend.








Boot camp for mac el capitan