Same problem, also with BCM 57881 on an Asrock Z77 series board.
I noticed the 57781 was gone in Windows 10 too. I had to do a CMOS reset to get it back. Boot into macOS and the network works, if you have installed FakePCIID etc. Reboot macOS and the 57781 is gone again, needing a CMOS reset to...
If the kext cache is updated or rebuilt, you just reboot and let Clover do its thing. That's my understanding anyway. If all else fails, on the desktop we can always switch back to AHCI for one boot and RAID should work again for the next boot.
The patch goes in the KextsToPatch section, but...
I guess you'll only know for certain if somebody else has tried that specific model. Having said that, I'm running an MSI GTX1070 and it works just fine.
I'm wondering, would it be possible to use FakePCIID for this?
I've made a Clover kext patch which, I think, is superior to patching the Info.plist manually. I've just updated from 10.12.4 to 10.12.5 (updated AppleAHCIPort) with this, and RAID mode still works. This patch replaces pci8086,1e03...
Just to quickly confirm what everybody knows already - SSDT-HDMI-NVIDIA-PEG0.aml and DP->HDMI adapter are needed to enable sound on the MSI 1070 ARMOR 8G OC
FWIW HDMI audio does not work on my MSI 1070 card, HDMIAudio.kext does nothing useful on my config. I'm currently awaiting delivery of DP->HDMI adapter and will post results.
I had the same problem with my Asrock series 7 board. iGPU would only work when I pulled the dGPU. I had to do a CMOS reset, then the BIOS option for primary GPU started working again.
To fix the memory problem (which is purely cosmetic btw), you can try ticking "trust" in the SMBIOS pane in Clover Configurator. This will make Clover trust whatever your BIOS is reporting instead of relying on its own detection.
Hey, that solved it for me too. That's a weird problem. Is this a Clover bug or bad config? Are the Clover guys aware of this?
EDIT: Handily, this also fixed a jerky mouse pointer problem - every 4 or 5 seconds the mouse pointer would freeze for maybe 60 ms. Enough to notice, not enough to be a...
Windows installed in UEFI mode shouldn't need CSM, unless you're still on Windows 7 where some drivers may still need it. Did you install Windows in legacy mode?
You are absolutely correct. The picture is more nuanced than just PCIe speed. I made some assumptions I didn't mention. For instance - I assumed maybe the poster was thinking about upgrading the CPU to Ivy Bridge or perhaps even switch to the Skylake platform. I was hoping to demonstrate that...
No, it's not a bottleneck. Due to Sandy Bridge only supporting PCIe 2.0, you will lose 1-2 fps depending on the game, but it's very, very far from being a bottleneck. Workloads that need to shuffle more data around may obviously be hit harder. If you need to know more, google PCIe 2.0 vs 3.0...
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