- Joined
- Jun 24, 2014
- Messages
- 289
- Motherboard
- ASUS Maximus VII Hero
- CPU
- i7 4790k
- Graphics
- HD 4600 + GTX 970
- Mac
- Mobile Phone
Think an easy solution to this would be disable the touchscreen via bios, could be a quick fix while still keeping voodooI2CHID. If you still want touch for windows and not turn it off in bios then change the scope below from Return (GPLD (Zero, 0x05)) to Return (GPLD (Zero, Zero))So, no touchscreen is not the end of the world perhaps but without voodooI2CHID the touchpad is hot garbage. Inputs can be jerky but the gestures are almost unusable. 2 finger scrolling works OK (Some jerkiness) but the 3-4 finger swipe (Swiping up and also left<->right) barely works and the pinch gesture does not work at all.
So no more kernel panics but also a bad experience with the touchpad... I'll update if I find a solution in the meantime but I may end up just reverting to Monteray because that was flawless.
SSDT-USBP.aml
Code:
Scope (HS09)
{
Method (_UPC, 0, NotSerialized) // _UPC: USB Port Capabilities
{
Return (GUPC (One))
}
Method (_PLD, 0, NotSerialized) // _PLD: Physical Location of Device
{
Return (GPLD (Zero, 0x05))
}
}
No idea if this will work, set the USB port to be external, believe you'd change GPLD call to be (One, 0x05). I think: Zero = internal and One = external as referenced by HS01 and HS02 being external ports?
It looks like voodooi2c causes the panic but since it's only on shutdown, we can guess when macOS shuts down it asks voodooi2c to do xyz to the USB controller to power down. I looked at the thread linked and the crash report, it's crashing when recalling something stored in RAM on shutdown. If we change the port to external it may circumvent this call but won't be surprised if thats not the case. SSDT-I2C.aml is a bit beyond me since I been away so long but the solution will have to be there or by voodooi2c dev changing some thing during shutdown operations.
offtopic
I visited this thread bc I have the laptop back but it's kind of broken (hinge separation), very young nephew and high energy dog. Was curious on what has been happening with this nice laptop. I'm glad to see everyone chugging along with their hacks, brings back good memories. The things I've learned while doing hackintosh stuff has been a great asset at my work which provided me a sweet a M1 MBP over a year ago, Apple Silicon does not disappoint.