![]() ![]() This guide is written as a helping hand to those users who have some understanding of using legacy hackintosh methods but are considering using Lilu as a means to migrate to MacOS Mojave/Catalina or want to use Lilu in place of traditional/legacy MacOS patching methods.īefore we go any further I should state for the record that I have no direct affiliation with Lilu, my first encounter with it was in early 2017 when i needed to resolve an issue with the refresh rate of the 4K display on my laptop. ![]() if you are using OpenCore as your boot loader then the guide is still relevant however the formatting of the OpenCore ist is slightly different and some parameters may need to be added to NVRAM variables rather than as separate. Note : This guide was written when Clover was the boot loader of choice as such the ist examples in this guide are mostley Clover specific. Last Update: 22nd Jan 2021 (Add note about OpenCore ist modifications) I used MacBookPro15,4 and 16,3 and it works perfectly.Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's GuideĪn iDiot's Guide To Lilu and its Plug-in's If you still can't get it to work, try a different SMBIOS. Notice that you'll have to re-generate all of the values in Hackintool as well. If you still get no results - try a different device-id and AAPL,ig-platform-id from the vanilla guide. If there's no output for 1-5 on con1, change to 0 and check 1-5 again on con2. It works - Great! If not: Increment the Bus-ID to 2, and reboot. Reboot your laptop and test you HDMI port. Remember, your values might be different. The range is between 1 to 6 and you can't have 2 connectors using the same Bus-ID - so start by setting con1 to 1 and con2 to 0 (which will also disable con2).Īdd all of this values to your ist (I'll save you the trouble, AQAAAA= equals 01000000), it should now look something like this: In the 1st group of 8 characters, you would want to change only 1 character, the 4 one, which is the Bus-ID. The 2nd group is the connector type - 00080000 is HDMI, 00040000 is DisplayPort (should be used also for DP alt-mode on type-c, but not tested yet), DVI is 04000000. The 3rd group of 8 characters is flags - you don't need to change it. The first line, is the framebuffer-con1-alldata, while the second is framebuffer-con2-alldata. Now we will want to add a space every 8 characters and separate it into 3 groups of 8 characters, like so: Now convert the data for the first key (all data) to HEX using the website I linked in the beginning. It should look like this: framebuffer-con1-alldata Make sure to choose the correct Video Device ID!įramebuffer-con1-alldata, framebuffer-con1-enable, and framebuffer-patch-enable. Open Hackintool, and go to Patch -> Patch, check the following: Reboot with your updated ist, and if it works - great! if not, continue to the next steps. Also make sure you have the latest version of WhateverGreen placed in Kexts. I don't no why, but for me the HDMI port won't work without it. In ProperTree, add -wegnoegpu to boot-args. If you have Coffee Lake (not sure if it would work?) or Comet Lake: AAPL,ig-platform-id = 00009B3E device-id = 3E9B0000 If you have Whiskey Lake: AAPL,ig-platform-id = 0000A53E (Usually you would use 0900A53E, but 10.15.5 broke HDMI on it) device-id = 3EA50000 If you have Kaby Lake: AAPL,ig-platform-id = 00001659 device-id = 59160000 Use the following values (edit using ProperTree): Yours might be Kaby Lake (for example, i5-8250U) or Comet Lake (such as i7-10510U, and i5-10210U) or Coffee Lake (there are Coffee Lake UHD 620 CPU's, I just don't know which. I have an i5-8265U, so it is whiskey lake: ![]() To do that, simply lookup your CPU on Intel's website (just write it in Google, it will probably be the first thing to show up). There are several different versions of the UHD 620 as far as I can tell.įirst, we need to determine what "code name" our CPU falls under. We want to find the correct device-id and AAPL,ig-platform-id to use. I made sure by connecting a second display, going to the Nvidia Control Panel in Windows 10, and under PhysX Configuration you'll see the ports like that:Īs you can see, the port is routed to the Intel UHD 620 - so we are good to go. If it is, this guide won't help you (and if it's Nvidia, no guide will help you. If you have a dGPU, make sure your HDMI port isn't routed to it. ![]()
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