- Joined
- Dec 15, 2015
- Messages
- 391
- Motherboard
- MSI Z270 M7
- CPU
- i7-7700K
- Graphics
- RX 5700 XT
- Mobile Phone
Updated my 3 builds without any problem.
I have NVMe drive as boot drive and 1 other EVO 850 SSD and an ordinary 1 TB HD for Timemachine backup. It's not an iMac .The slow boots on later apfs is likely trim on a drive that doesn't work well with apfs trim. I eventually just got a newer SSD to solve the problem, alternatively i bet if you disabled trimforce or clover trim patch it'd boot fast too with later apfs drivers.
You can patch apfs.efi with the following command if you don't want the white text (verbose output) on startup:
Code:perl -i -pe 's|\x00\x74\x07\xb8\xff\xff|\x00\x90\x90\xb8\xff\xff|sg' apfs.efi
Yes. See Post #1 for the link to the latest download.
Running Dell XPS 8930 with Clover 4509.
No issues upgrading to 10.13.5.
All I did was run the install and update apfs.efi.
You can patch apfs.efi with the following command if you don't want the white text (verbose output) on startup:
Code:perl -i -pe 's|\x00\x74\x07\xb8\xff\xff|\x00\x90\x90\xb8\xff\xff|sg' apfs.efi
FileVault 2 users:
- install the update using the App Store
- reboot your system
- select the installer partition (press F3 if hidden)
- login, it will install for a minute and reboot again
- select the installer partition again
- login, it will resume installation
- done!
I think it should be fine to use 10.13.5's apfs.efi with macOS 10.13.1, for example.Hey, why people keep asking this? I mean, is it a good idea to update Clover's APFS while not updating macOS? Seems risky to me..