Can you send me your steps and what did you change in bios along with Config.plist please?
**Standard Unibeast Installer with VoodooTSCSync added and Kernel patch from beginning of this guide**
1) Load default BIOS (I am using latest beta BIOS v.F6D since previous versions didn't see my M.2 SSD)
2) Set: Bios Features/Storage Boot Option Control to UEFI Only. Peripherals/Super IO Configuration/Serial Port 1 to disabled.
3) Made the following changes to org.chameleon.Boot.plist on Unibeast USB
-EthernetBuiltIn changed to NO
-GraphicsEnabler changed to NO
-Kernel Flags added "npci=0x2000"
4) Boot Unibeast USB with boot flags "-v -x -f nv_disable=1 kext-dev-mode=1"
5) That got me through the installer.
6) DO NOT use the newly installed OS yet--reboot into Unibeast again
7) Copy the VoodooTSCSync.kext from USB to new OS install
8) Now reboot into Unibeast boot selector and this time use the newly installed OS
9) I used Multibeast to install USB3 support (not sure if I needed it) and Ethernet drivers
10) Installed Nvidia Web driver and on boot changed nv_disable=1 to nv_drv=1
--OSX doesn't run very well like this--it's super slow and doesn't seem to load the Nvidia drivers--
11) Installed Clover with the following options:
-Install UEFI booting only
-Drivers64UEFI/CsmVideo & DataHub & OSXAptioFixDrv-64
-Clover Preference Pane
12) Used Terminal to copy kexts from /volumes/USB/Extra/Extensions to /volumes/EFI/EFI/CLOVER/kexts/10.10
-I copied AHCI, ALXEthernet, AppleACPI, AppleIntelE1000, AtherosE2200, Ev0reboot, FakeSMC, NullCPU, RealtekRTL, VoodooTSCSync
13) That got me booted on Clover and working. Still working with toleda on Audio....... see the other thread.
I see that your Gigabyte board also has the Realtek 1150 audio codec. I'm struggling with the audio on my Asus X99 which has the same codec. I never got it to work with toleda's patch (outputs show up but no audio) and now it sometimes works with the VoodooHDA 2.8.7.
We're still working on it.... see the audio thread.
So quick newbie question on the X99. I read through and searched this Thread and no where did I see if people had all 8 or 10 SATA ports working. I am thinking about making a Hackintosh NAS and was wondering if all SATA ports are working. Basically, I just need a board with 10 SATA ports and working ethernet, then I am good to go.
I don't have any reason to suspect they wouldn't all work but other than for the challenge, why would you build a NAS on OS X? I have two large file servers, one runs VMware ESX VMs with Windows Server 2008 R2 and Ubuntu and the other runs Windows Server 2008 R2. Coming from someone who has in the last year retired the last of his Intel Xserves... OS X Server is kind of a joke these days. I do not want an "app" to run my NAS. I would strongly recommend Linux.