- Joined
- Sep 21, 2010
- Messages
- 13,413
- Motherboard
- HP 17" 17-by3053cl
- CPU
- i5-1035G1
- Graphics
- Intel UHD Graphics, 1920x1080
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
Stork's Thunderbolt Build: i5-3570K | GA-Z77X-UP5-TH | HD4000 | Mountain Lion
MarkJohnson,
Yes, I used UniBeast. (You made me review my original post. ) I had no problem using UniBeast for the installation nor with MultiBeast. What you had to do with the "touch" Terminal commend is when you manuallly install or delete a kext(s).
Repair Permissions takes Apple's list of what OS X items need system level permissions to run. It's a wise thing to do after every OS X upgrade; I even do it before the update, just to be on the safe side.
Sleep, on a hackintosh, is highly dependent upon what components you have installed and what external peripherals you have installed. So, read what others have done with your setup. I have no problems with manual, automatic and/or scheduled sleep/wake-up.
Was there a reason you didn't install with a 10.8.2 UniBeast install drive? I was able to with limited success. I found I needed to run a
or it wouldn't reboot with or without running MultiBeast. I would get some sort of cache error. That command is suppose to rebuild the cache.Code:sudo touch /System/Library/Extensions
Is this similar to you repairPermission command?
I also needed to add trim for my SSD and added the SSDT for my i7-2600k for speedstep to work at all (otherwise it was stuck idling at x16 speed).
My sleep still gives me issues sometime. usually the second time it sleeps, it won't wake. Plus it sometimes auto-restarts occasionally when I shut-off for some reason. I think it is related to the wake issue above.
MarkJohnson,
Yes, I used UniBeast. (You made me review my original post. ) I had no problem using UniBeast for the installation nor with MultiBeast. What you had to do with the "touch" Terminal commend is when you manuallly install or delete a kext(s).
Repair Permissions takes Apple's list of what OS X items need system level permissions to run. It's a wise thing to do after every OS X upgrade; I even do it before the update, just to be on the safe side.
Sleep, on a hackintosh, is highly dependent upon what components you have installed and what external peripherals you have installed. So, read what others have done with your setup. I have no problems with manual, automatic and/or scheduled sleep/wake-up.