Pre-amble
When I originally wrote the
Beginner's Guide to Creating a Custom USB SSDT the idea was to demystify and simplify the process of configuring all those USB ports our PC motherboards come with, so that they worked properly under macOS. The main sticking-point for many builders was the arbitrary 15-port limit Apple has imposed. We have to accept this, but still make best use of the ports we have which often involves 'losing' a few from the ones that are present, to keep within these confines. What's more, not all ports are the same and we have to take this into account when we configure them.
A very talented software-engineer, and member here, called
@headkaze has come up with a very useful tool to help us with a lot of the tedious chores and mental gymnastics we have to perform to get our builds running sweetly, and this is called
Hackintool. One part of this superb app is dedicated to USB port configuration.
Now that macOS Catalina is here, Apple is signalling a new way forward. No-longer can we use 32-bit applications, and, from here on in, 3rd-party kexts or drivers have strict limitiations imposed on where they can go and what they can do.
What I realised is that if we combine my earlier guide with
@headkaze 's excellent
Hackintool, we could utilise an even simpler method for configuring our USB ports, and one that should not give the new, more security-focussed macOS, any red-flag moments.
New Guide
Let's dive in then. Set aside around 30-minutes, depending on your confidence, to get this done.
Your PC motherboard likely has more USB ports than any Apple Mac so far produced. Even a basic Mini-ITX motherboard. So we need to whittle down the number we do have until it matches what Apple's macOS expects, and ensure the ones we keep run at the correct speed, supply the correct power and mount and unmount safely when required, to keep data safe.
The first job is to assemble all the 'tools' you will need:
Disk Utility
Terminal
Clover Configurator or
OpenCore Configurator or
PlistEdit Pro
USBInjectAll.kext - Edit August 2020 - Recommend v 0.7.3
not 0.7.5.
Hackintool
IORegistryExplorer.app
A USB2.0 flash-drive
A USB3.0 flash-drive
In this guide we will be directly editing our
config.plist file. For illustrative purposes we demonstrate our edits using each of the three of the editor options in the list above, so you can make your choice.
You only need to use one. See
Appendix #1
Step 1 - Install the USBInjectAll.kext and a Port-Limit Removal Patch
We need to make all the ports our PC motherboard has available for us to work with.
To mount your hidden EFI partition you first need to check what it's disk designation is. Run the
Disk Utility app. and check what you see here:
On all GUID/GPT partitioned disks the EFI folder will come
before any APFS 'containers' and even before the main disk. The image above is actually from High Sierra to make things simpler and even though we can't yet see the EFI partition it will actually be located
before the main partition. Because in this case the main area of the disk is "disk0s
2" the EFI partition will be at "disk0s
1". (The other disk you can see in the screengrab is my separate 500GB data drive. We're ignoring that).
Now we know what the disk designation is we can mount that hidden EFI partition using the magic of
Terminal commands:
Code:
sudo mkdir /Volumes/EFI
sudo mount -t msdos /dev/disk0s1 /Volumes/EFI
What you find in
your EFI partition will depend on which bootloader you are using - Clover or OpenCore. Either is fine.
For Clover - copy the USBInjectAll.kext into the EFI/CLOVER/kexts/Other
For OpenCore - copy USBInjectAll.kext into OC/Kexts - AND - add a new kext section to your
config.plist. If you are an early adopter of OpenCore you will know that you have to declare each kext with the path to it's executable etc. (See screengrab below).
Port_limit Removal Patch:
The PLR Patches (as we will call them from now on for brevity) are explained in each macOS support section -
High Sierra,
Mojave and
Catalina.
See Appendix #2
For Clover - enter the PLRP in your
config.plist . Here is the Catalina one viewed in
Clover Configurator.
Here is the same patch inserted using
PlistEdit Pro instead (see
Appendix #1) As you can see there are five
Kexts to Patch, with our two Catalina PLR-Patches at the top of the list.
For OpenCore - set Quirk "XhciPortLimit" as "/true". Here is what it looks like in
OpenCore Configurator. See below for what it looks like in
PlistEdit Pro.
Here is the same "Quirk" being edited-in using
PlistEdit Pro. Pretty simple:
Save and Reboot
Step 2) Check what USB ports you have.
Run
Hackintool and select the USB icon in the menu bar:
Different chipsets have different numbers of ports, but the above is fairly typical. You can see my Z370 chipset in the blue highlighted bar.
See Appendix #3
Step 3) Port Discovery
To identify which port on your motherboard you are going to keep and configure, you need to test each one with a USB flash-drive to see where it appears in the output of
Hackintool.
Here is a test of the same port using first a
USB2.0 drive and second a
USB3.0/3.1 drive:
View attachment 434769 View attachment 434770
The physical port is the same, but how it is enumerated is different depending on what type of device is plugged-in -
USB2.0 is an
HS** port and
USB3.0/3.1 is an
SS** port. So as you can see, a single, physical USB3 port counts as 2x ports towards our 15-limit because either type of device can be plugged in to it.
Repeat this process for each port on your motherboard and make a record somewhere.
Here are the two plans I made for my Z370M-D3H motherboard:
With this to hand we can now remove ports from the
Hackintool list that we do not need so that we can get down to the magic number of 15 as stipulated by Apple. To do this we
highlight each port we do not need, using the cmd+mouse method:
Once we have done this we mouse-click on the Delete icon I've circled in red in the above screengrab. This removes ports we do not wish to use or configure.
The final list is as follows:
Step 4) Export our configuration File
Select the icon I've circled in red in the screengrab above to export all your work:
That final
USBPorts.kext is the file we want. The other two are useful for other configuration methods but we don't need them today.
Step 5) Installing our configuration and Clean-up
If you still have your EFI partition mounted then you can:
For Clover -
1) Delete USBInjectAll.kext and replace it with
USBPorts.kext in
EFI/CLOVER/kexts/Other. Remove the PLR-Patches from your
config.plist either by editing, or ticking the "Disable" boxes using Clover Configurator.
For OpenCore -
1) Delete USBInjectAll.kext and replace it with
USBPorts.kext in
OC/Kexts - AND - don't forget to amend the kext name in your
config.plist, removing the reference to its executable path:
2) To remove the PLR-Patches either edit them to "/false", or un-tick that Quirk - "XhciPortLimit".
Save and Reboot
Step 6) Job Done - Check your work
Either run
Hackintool and select that USB icon to see your ports, or run
IORegistryExplorer and scroll the left-pane down to the XHC section.
That's it. Well done on completing your USB Port configuration!
Appendix #1
Your
config.plist is in a plain-text format called
xml and you need a text-editor to modify it. Which you choose is down to what you feel comfortable with. Many people recommend
PlistEdit Pro while others like
Apple's Xcode editor. Personally I like
Clover Configurator and
OpenCore Configurator, though some unfairly criticise them. They
are being actively updated and I have built PCs using them without any problems. Whichever you choose has to be able to edit in
plain-text, not just in rich-text or a proprietary format. Even macOS's
TextEdit will do the job if you know how to set it up.
Remember though, it is always wise to double-check your work and make back-ups, before committing any changes to your PC.
Appendix #2
Please bear in mind Port-Limit Removal Patches are
not designed for permanent use because they overwrite and go beyond areas of memory set aside for the job by Apple. Think of your USB ports like a box of a dozen eggs, two rows of six. When full the lid closes and all is safe. If you put another five eggs in down the centre, they appear to fit perfectly - but now you can't close the lid. Things can fall out and break.
In short, long-term use of the patch means data loss and system crashes are only a whisker away.
Appendix #3
This guide concentrates on the XHCI controller all modern Intel chipsets have. Some older motherboards feature chipsets with both the previous EHCI standard and the newer XHCI. Even older still might have just two EHCI. If you see
three lines in the top panel of Hackintool with two EHC and one XHC controller then
prioritise the XHC because this is where USB3.0 comes from. If you
only see two EHC controllers then your system is stuck at USB2.0. You can use these ports though, as you move to the next stage. For more information on these
see my original guide as you will need to put some
renames in place in your
config.plist.
Final Technical Note: Because Apple is reigning-in on what 3rd-party kexts can be installed, it was initially worrying that using
any form of kext installation to modify the ACPI/USB ports could get blocked in future. However by putting our USBPorts.kext in the EFI/ or OC/ folder macOS doesn't 'see' it. What's more, if you run
kextstat from
Terminal you will notice that although other kexts are visible to macOS, USBPorts.kext is not. My take on this is because there is no 'executable' within it's container.
The Credits -
Thank you to
@headkaze for working so diligently to make
Hackintool the splendid tool-box of useful utilities for Hackintosh builders that it is. In this guide we only touch on one part of what it can do.
Thanks also to to
@Sniki for taking up the baton and forking USBInjectAll.kext for the latest motherboard chipsets. We were working on a kext-less ACPI patch until realisation dawned that this method might be simpler.
Thanks, as always, to the owners of the site and my colleagues here at Tonymacx86, for support and encouragement along the way.