- Joined
- Sep 22, 2011
- Messages
- 1,520
- Motherboard
- HP EliteDesk 800 G5 Mini
- CPU
- i9-9900
- Graphics
- UHD 630
- Mac
- Mobile Phone
An OC Configurator that. you might find interesting ...
For all of my OC config.plist modifications, I have been using XCode (version 12.4 at the time of this post) instead of a 'configurator.' I tend to stay away from configurators, because they add uncertainty during the debugging process (I'm debugging the configurator AND my config.plist). There is an OC configurator that looks promising. Check this out. I won't be supporting this tool (at least not yet), but it might be worth investigating. It includes the OCValidate tool that highlights any errors in your config.plist (same ocvalidate utility included with the OpenCore download). You'll find that if you load my config.plist from OC0.6.8-EFI-r001, there are non-critical errors that would need to be fixed if any of identified properties were to be enabled (they are currently disabled, and thus do not cause any issues).
For all of my OC config.plist modifications, I have been using XCode (version 12.4 at the time of this post) instead of a 'configurator.' I tend to stay away from configurators, because they add uncertainty during the debugging process (I'm debugging the configurator AND my config.plist). There is an OC configurator that looks promising. Check this out. I won't be supporting this tool (at least not yet), but it might be worth investigating. It includes the OCValidate tool that highlights any errors in your config.plist (same ocvalidate utility included with the OpenCore download). You'll find that if you load my config.plist from OC0.6.8-EFI-r001, there are non-critical errors that would need to be fixed if any of identified properties were to be enabled (they are currently disabled, and thus do not cause any issues).
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