Chameleon Bootloader Boot1 Error
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JackDavolio Joined: Aug 23, 2012 Messages: 11 Mobo: iMac CPU: 2Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo Graphics: Integrated? Apr 5, 2013 at 8:56 PM #1 JackDavolio Joined: Aug 23, 2012
Boot1 Error Chameleon
Messages: 11 Mobo: iMac CPU: 2Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo Graphics: Integrated? Hello you b1f error clover awesome people. My spiffy Hackintosh has been misbehaving recently and after searching and trying all I could find, I still am unable
Boot1 Error Clover
to fix it. I have had a perfectly running hack for several months ( i5 3570k, GA-Z77-DS3H, Nvidia GT 640, Samsung 128GB SSD, Corsair 16GB ram) but now all of a sudden it decided it boot0ss error niresh won't boot, instead giving me this: boot0: GPT boot0: test boot0: test boot0: done boot1: error_ I have researched this issue and found out that it does boot from a USB, then working as usual, I tried re-installing everything including bootloader from most recent Multibeast, I also took out the SSD, plugged into other macbook and did all the disk repair, verify permissions, etc, but nada. It still won't boot b1f error unibeast on its own, without the USB. Any help, or advice on where to go from there? I suppose a fresh re-install could fix the problem, but first I would like to see if there is any other way to fix this. Thanks a lot - you are an excellent community, I trust in you! Stork Admin Staff Member Joined: Sep 21, 2010 Messages: 8,786 Mobo: ASUS MAXIMUS VIII GENE Z170 CPU: i5-6600K Graphics: Gigabyte GTX 950 2GB OC WindForce 2X Mac: , , Classic Mac: , Mobile Phone: Apr 5, 2013 at 8:59 PM #2 Stork Admin Staff Member Joined: Sep 21, 2010 Messages: 8,786 Mobo: ASUS MAXIMUS VIII GENE Z170 CPU: i5-6600K Graphics: Gigabyte GTX 950 2GB OC WindForce 2X Mac: , , Classic Mac: , Mobile Phone: See boot0 Error: The Official Thread Thunderball GA-Z77X-UP5-TH| i5 3570K| GeForce GTX 650 Ti Zorro GA-Z68X-UD3H-B3| i7 2600K| HD 3000 JackDavolio Joined: Aug 23, 2012 Messages: 11 Mobo: iMac CPU: 2Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo Graphics: Integrated? Apr 6, 2013 at 4:31 PM #3 JackDavolio Joined: Aug 23, 2012 Messages: 11 Mobo: iMac CPU: 2Ghz Intel Core 2 Duo Graphics: Integrated? I tried first the second method (unplugged HDD, plugged it into other Mac, ran multibeast) and didn't
Apple and Mac OS X Discussion Welcome to MyDellMini! The largest dedicated Dell Mini and Dell Streak forum. Discussion for newbies and experienced users alike on the Dell Mini 9, Dell Mini 10 and many other
Boot1 /boot 5 Clover
Dell Products. Looking to hackintosh you Dell Mini? Get the tools and the know-how at our b1f init 5 Mac OS X section. Check out our guides for help topics on upgrading and configuring your Dell Mini. Due to excessive spammer activity, registrations
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have been disabled. If you wish to register, please send us a message on Facebook Community Links Members List Search Forums Show Threads Show Posts Other Search Options Find New Posts Find Today's Posts Tag Search Advanced Search https://www.tonymacx86.com/threads/boot0-boot1-error-hack-boots-only-from-usb-help.95131/ Google™ Search Go to Page... » Search Site Advanced Search Thread Tools Display Modes (#1) danb35 Junior Member Posts: 16 Join Date: Apr 2009 Boot failure: "boot1: error" - 10-12-2009, 06:28 PM I've suddenly started having trouble booting my Mac OS X 10.5.8 installation on my Vostro A90 (Mini 9). When I power up, this is all that comes up on the screen (after the POST screen): Code: boot0: GPT boot0: testing boot0: testing boot0: http://www.mydellmini.com/forum/general-mac-os-x-discussion/14003-boot-failure-boot1-error.html done boot1: error IIRC, I have DellEFI 1.2 installed, using the Chameleon bootloader. A search suggested using a DellMiniBoot USB drive to boot the machine, then reinstalling DellEFI. When I do that, the only startup volume to choose is hd(0,1), which just reboots the DellMiniBoot USB drive. What else can I try here? danb35 View Public Profile Send a private message to danb35 Find all posts by danb35 (#2) rtkwon Member Posts: 36 Join Date: Oct 2009 10-14-2009, 08:19 AM May not be the case here, but do you have a space in the name for your hard drive? I'm fairly new to the Hackintosh scene, and I ran into this problem on my first-ever install. Upon successfully installing Snow Leopard, I kept getting that same exact error. Luckily for me, mechdrew pointed out that a space in the hard drive name may cause this error. I omitted the space, and wallah! No more boot1: error. rtkwon View Public Profile Send a private message to rtkwon Find all posts by rtkwon (#3) danb35 Junior Member Posts: 16 Join Date: Apr 2009 10-14-2009, 12:08 PM Thanks for the reply. No, there's no space in the hard drive name--it's "OSXMINI9" or something very similar (can't boot it right now to check, but definitely no spaces). It had been working fine for at least a few months, and I can't think of anythin
A Hackintosh Save You? [UPDATED] How to dual-boot Windows and OS X on separate disks Tabs HOME INSTALLATION GUIDES HARDWARE RECOMMENDATIONS ADDITIONAL RESOURCES WHAT IS HACKINTOSHING? Ads Below Tabs February 12, http://www.macbreaker.com/2012/02/hackintosh-boot0-error.html 2012 How to fix the boot0 error for your Hackintosh Getting Mac OS X to boot from your Hackintosh's hard disk without any help can be a difficult process. Most of the time, using Multibeast to install UserDSDT http://forum.voodooprojects.org/index.php/topic,854.0.html or Easybeastwill do the trick. However, you may get a boot0 error, instead of the normal Hackintosh bootscreen, after running Multibeast on your Hackintosh. This error might be caused by the sector format of your Hackintosh's hard drive. boot1 error If so, there's a fix available, but it isn't easy. UPDATE (December 6, 2015): This issue no longer occurs when your Hackintosh uses Clover Bootloader (now the default in the Unibeast method of installing OS X). Overview Sometimes, a boot0 error just means that your Hackintosh's bootloader wasn't installed properly. In which case, boot into your Hackintosh with iBoot or Unibeast, and re-run UserDSDT/Easybeast with Multibeast again. However, a boot0 error might also happen when b1f init 5 your Hackintosh's hard drive reads and writes files in 4096 byte sectors. Most hard drives read and write files in 512 byte sectors, and Chimera bootloader (the bootloader installed by UserDSDT and Easybeast) can't be installed normally on a hard disk with 4096 byte sectors. To fix this problem,you have to unmount (turn off) the hard disk that Mac OS X is installed on, and then manually reinstall Chimera on that unmounted disk. NOTE: Though this guide fixes the boot0 error for Chimera bootloader, it will also work for Chameleon bootloader, which is essentially the same thing. What you need You can't fix this problem straight from your normal installation of Mac OS X, because it requires you to unmount your main hard disk, and it's impossible for OS X to unmountitself.Instead,here's what you'll need: Anything with the Mac OS X Installer:To unmount the hard disk,you need to boot into something that will give you access to a different copy of Mac OS X, such as the Mac OS X Installer. This could be aUnibeast USB drive, Kakewalk USB drive, myHack USB drive, Snow Leopard installation DVD, xMove partition, or evena cloned copy of your hard disk. Standalone installer for Chimera bootloader:In this guide, you'll be writing "boot1h", which is located inside the Chimera installer, onto your hard disk. This is the manual way t
Register Voodooprojects » Chameleon » Bug Reports » SOLVED boot1: error for many BIOSes (Dell XPS 410/Dimension 9200 in particular) « previous next » Print Pages: [1] Author Topic: SOLVED boot1: error for many BIOSes (Dell XPS 410/Dimension 9200 in particular) (Read 9121 times) 0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. rivig Entrant Posts: 4 SOLVED boot1: error for many BIOSes (Dell XPS 410/Dimension 9200 in particular) « on: October 09, 2009, 07:53:44 AM » There are many people here complaining about Chameleon working fine from USB drive, but giving them infamous "boot1: error" when trying to install it to hard drive. This error (in my case at least) is caused by improper handling of some BIOSes of segment:offset passed to them by boot1h.First, kudos to Zef, who managed to squeeze full HFS+ read-only driver into 512 bytes (or so - second part of boot1h). It is amazing achievement - it parses all variants of file location, and judging by the code should even work in highly fragmented cases, when overflow extents are necessary, but it complicated my debugging immensely. There is simply almost no place, you should move code around to be able to squeeze some debug output.Finally, I found that some BIOSes does not like when offset passed is negative, that is have highest bit set. This is incorrect, because address is formed by interpreting offset as unsigned integer, but so it was programmed by people who can not read well. The consequences are that such BIOS does not allow to load second stage boot loader (containing EFI emulation) if it's larger than 32K.The phenomenon of successful booting from USB can be explained as well: this part of BIOS is written much later, by other people, who interpreted the architecture by the book, not by heart ;-)Anyway, the recipe is simple - instead of splitting linear address by 16:16 bits, split it 20:12, because higher 12 b