- Joined
- Feb 7, 2013
- Messages
- 25
- Motherboard
- Gigabyte Z370 Aorus Gaming 5
- CPU
- i7-8700K
- Graphics
- Vega 64
- Mac
- Mobile Phone
OK, I would listen to cmn699. He/she knows what's going on a lot better than most others on this forum.
OK I double checked Bios.no changes there.
- Since you had shut down the PC and Removed disks from the MoBo and connected only 1 SATA disk to Port 0 and there is only the USB Installer disk on USB port, there is a chance your CMOS settings could have changed.
- I want you to take another look at BIOS , to make sure it has not changed from the one we have kept to boot maCOS using Intel HD Graphics with your USB Installer as First Boot Device.
- I also want you now to put back the EmuVariableUEFI-64.efi back inside the drivers64UEFI folder .
- Reboot and at CBM screen, go to Options>SMBIOS and take a Photo of that screen (to upload what it is showing now).
- Change the SMBIOS Product Model: to iMac18,1 and take another Photo (to upload)
- Reboot the System Disk in Verbose to see if it can boot without freeze.
Well I have updated the BIOS recently.One more thing, try downgrading your BIOS from your MoBo manufacturer website. I had this problem with my Gigabyte board after I updated the BIOS. I reverted back and poof, it was gone.. Worth a shot.
Since your CPU is i5-8400 and not the latest 9th Generation, I would suggest trying to go back to its prior BIOS Version.Your problem seems to be related to Graphics and the BIOS update may have something to do with that CPU associated Graphics. Without this new information from you I could not suggest this trial.Well I have updated the BIOS recently.
Actually its the latest version.
I dont know if this causes the boot loops but here are the things they have changed(improved) in last version
Which version should I downgrade to?Since your CPU is i5-8400 and not the latest 9th Generation, I would suggest trying to go back to its prior BIOS Version.Your problem seems to be related to Graphics and the BIOS update may have something to do with that CPU associated Graphics. Without this new information from you I could not suggest this trial.
Which version should I downgrade to?
Here is the link to the website:
https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/support/H370M-BAZOOKA
So I downgraded BIOS to the version you suggested (And XMP function stopped working! I would like to try v13 later if this version works)
- I don't have any MSI Board to recommend any particular version based on personal experience.
- Fix TPM issue.
- Version 7B24v12Release Date 2018-05-28 File Size 7.77 MB looks like a good Version because it is supposed to
- Improve USB compatibility.
- Modify Optane setting.
- Update Intel Micro code for security vulnerabilities
I switched to OsxAptioFixDrv and it solved the first problemRegarding USBInjectAll and XHCI-Unsupported:
- Screenshot 1: "Error Allocating Runtime" area is usually resolved by using a different Patio Memory Fix driver such as:
- AptioMemoryFix-64
- OsxAptioFixDrv
- OsxAptioFix2Drv
- OsxAptioFix3Drv
- OsxAptioFix2Drv-free2000
- Only 1 of the above drivers can be used at a time; never use more than one of the above.
- You should also try using "slide=0" from Boot Arguments of config.plist in combination with the above memory fix drivers.
- On the Designare Z390 motherboard from Gigabyte, for example, we must use OsxAptioFix2Drv-free2000 in combination with slide=0.
- If your BIOS has option for "Above 4G Decoding" try enabling that.
- Screenshot 3: The error message at the bottom is "Still waiting for root device". This means that your USB Flash disk might be on a USB 3.0 port and that port get disabled when Mojave loads up. So move the USB install disk to a black USB 2.0 port instead of a blue USB 3.0 port. If you have multiple black USB 2.0 ports, randomly pick one. If the problem persists, move USB disk to another USB 2.0 port. One of the ports will work.
- You should keep both of these kexts.
- XHCI-Unsupported supersedes XHCI-200-series-injector, so we should avoid XHCI-200-series-injector.
- XHCI Handoff should be enabled in BIOS.