- Joined
- Mar 25, 2014
- Messages
- 34
- Motherboard
- GA-Z77X-UD3H
- CPU
- i7 3770k
- Graphics
- XFX-R7870
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
I've tried the cindori program. Same result. I restart but it doesn't disable the signed kext. If I force it it will hang Yosemite.
The solution from Cindori don't work for me. If I try setting the nvram boot arguments, I get this:
nvram boot-args=kext-dev-mode=1
nvram: Error setting variable - 'boot-args': (iokit/common) general error
I followed the guide anyway, but I had to use 'sudo' for every command and after reboot there isn't trim enabled.
Can I install the trim patch from Multibeast with "kext-dev-mode=1" in the /Extra plist without going into trouble?
Edit: Same problem with the Chameleon SSD optimizer. After every reboot, the two programs want to disable the kext-signing, but it seems they can't – as I in the terminal.
I'm also getting the "Error parsing plist file" in the boot-screen and it waits 5 seconds, but then continues booting.
I think this is where mine failed also. With TRIM enabled, my BIOS settings reverted to IDE...really didn't think that was possible. Then of course, there is the moment of panic when you can't access your cloned drive or Time Machine backup because you booted in IDE mode. I'm in the process of a re-install, so we'll see what happens. I'm still wondering about using the AppleACPIPlatform rollback. I'll work out the sound issues later, as usual.
And another little tip... my TM backup was on a USB 3.0 drive plugged into a USB 3.0 port. Obviously, the installer won't see it during the registration screens because USB 3.0 support is not enabled until you do so in MultiBeast. Sort of a "duh" moment for me. Now, of course, restoring a TM backup over USB 2.0 means I'll be sitting here for a week - it says 18 minutes...uh huh - but at least it's possible.