Other fixes are available for P55 boards as well- I have used the HDEF and USB fixes for my DSDT. Using what I've learned from many OSx86 gurus, I will show you how to edit your DSDT.aml to allow your system to restart without clearing your CMOS. To make it easy, the good folks from the EvOsx86 Team have made DSDTSE, a GUI application that allows you to do all of this in one convenient editor. From OS X, you must extract your DSDT.aml, convert it to DSDT.dsl, then edit it, then recompile it to DSDT.aml. Unfortunately, you can't just open this file in TextEdit. You can tweak your system in all sorts of ways by changing lines of code in the DSDT.aml file. For further details on what it is and how it works, check out In the simplest of terms, it is a file that you place at the root of your system to tell OS X how to locate and enable features of your computer without checking your BIOS. Using a DSDT (Differentiated System Description Table) is a necessity for running Snow Leopard on P55 boards. NOTE: As of the latest bios revisions by Gigabyte, the CMOS reset is now fixed.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |