pastrychef
Moderator
- Joined
- May 29, 2013
- Messages
- 19,464
- Motherboard
- Mac Studio - Mac13,1
- CPU
- M1 Max
- Graphics
- 32 Core
- Mac
- Classic Mac
- Mobile Phone
I'm testing this solution (thanks to @Mark Quark post-2387324) for the next macOS updates, without using RestrictEvents.kext and revpatch=sbvmm boot arg.
For your normal use set your EFI with SecureBootModel=Default or j137 for iMac Pro 1,1 and the SIP to csr-active-config=00080000 (SIP Enabled). Works if you only use the WIFI patch from OCLP.
Sonoma will recognize and install the incremental update (according to your automatic system update settings).
So when you have a macos update:
1. Run (Update) OCLP and Revert Root Patches.
2. Start the Sonoma update.
3. When the update is complete, set SecureBootModel=Disabled and the SIP to csr-active-config=03080000
4. Reboot
5. After restarting, change SecureBootModel=Default or j137 for iMac Pro 1,1 and csr-active-config=00080000 , run OCLP and Start Root Patching.
6. Reboot
7. Done
Currently my EFI is set SecureBootModel=j137 (for iMac Pro 1.1) and csr-active-config=00080000 (SIP enabled) and the system runs... seems error-free.
Ever since I started using OCLP Wi-Fi fix on my laptop and HP EliteDesk 800 G4 DM, I have just been downloading the full macOS installers from Terminal and using that to update.
How to Download Full MacOS Installers from Command Line
Mac users can download full complete MacOS installers directly from the command line. This is an incredibly useful feature particularly if you want to build USB boot drive installers, you manage mu…
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