twarh Posted November 28, 2015 Share Posted November 28, 2015 Hi all.I just got into the Hackintosh scene a couple of weeks ago, and got 2 Hackintosh builds up and running from doing a lot of reading on tonymacx86, Reddit/r/Hackintosh,OSXLatitude, InsanelyMac…I got a Desktop configured, which was relatively easy compared to getting OSX running on my ThinkPad E320.What’s working so farI got almost every little frigging thing working on the ThinkPad E320 (minus the Wifi, which is a very typical Laptop woe I’ve found. I’ve resorted to a nano USB wifi adapter while a Broadcom chip ships). CPU GPU Webcam Intel HDA Keyboard/Trackpad Ethernet USB Wi Fi Bluetooth Internal Display, HDMI out, VGA out So what’s wrong?The only problem is that the laptop overheats. I do not know what exactly is wrong, but I think the fans are simply not spinning fast enough. I used to run Linux and Windows on this very laptop before, and the fans would spin up significantly every time the processor load would increase.After I Hackintoshed it, the fans can barely be heard even when the CPU temp goes up to 80-90 degrees celsius! And even though my CPU is detected (with 25 P-States) the battery life is really really bad. I get roughly 2 hours on a full 100% charge on a 6 Cell Battery.I tried patching my DSDT and a little bit, but mostly it’s the same from another DSDT I found for my motherboard and model - its the Intel HM65 Chipset. The DSDT worked well, and I had to make a slight tweak for getting the Intel HDA. I used Piker-Alpha’s ssdtgen script to create the SSDTs for my machine and everything boots up and gets detected like I said.What I’ve tried so far / more information for diagnosis1. Underclocking with SSDT/DSDT - FailI’ve tried solving the overheating/battery life issues by forcing an under clock. I entered lower values into Piker’s script to do this (the script generates SSDTs without any errors when I put in lower Base Frequency and Turbo Frequency and TDP values) but the SSDTs cause the infamous error- P-Step Stepper Error 18 at step 35 Error. I think the newer SSDTS should work, but I think my DSDT is referencing the old SSDT with 25 P-States or something like that, and that’s causing the P-Step error on boot (this is just my hypothesis, I’m entirely unsure). I have included my working DSDT and SSDT in the post here so the community can have a look and help patch these files to underclock my processor to 1.8 Ghz with 2.2 Turbo (think that would be easier on the overheating/battery drain).2. Underclocking with Clover - Fail againMy second approach to under clock was to edit the CloverCPU configuration portion. I entered lower Frequency and Bus Speed and 0x00FA Latency values (according to Clover Wiki that Latency is best for Notebooks). But I saw no difference, and this experimentation failed as well. Some other weird thingsLooking at HWSensors app and Intel Power Gadget I can see the CPU stepping working (variation in the frequency curve) but I definitely don’t see 25 steppings (as the chart’s jumps are not that granular) which Piker’s script outputs for my current (working, stock clocked, linked in post) SSDTs. DPCI Manager shows around 6 P-States in fact. AppleIntelCPUPowerManangementInfo.kext by Rehabmanshows around 25 P-States, but then again the kext only outputs those messages during boot. Could it be that during boot 25 P-States are detected initially and as the kernel loads it’s lost for some conflict? HWSensors also does not have a Fan control portion either (are my fans not being detected at all?). So I can’t manually control my Fans either. Please help. I would ideally like my CPU under clocked and my fans working properly. This is the only step left for my beloved HackBook. Could the USB wifi adapter be screwing things up? The laptop goes into sleep, deep sleep and wakes up fine. I spent a lot of time getting it to this far, just need help with the power management/fan control portion, so please help if possible.I’m attaching some files so that maybe you guys could take a look and help diagnose the issue -[1] My Clover Config [2] DSDT/SSDT [3] IOReg [4] AppleIntelCPUPowerManagementInfo.kext output (I installed the kext and it only shows the output in the boot log :/ ) [5] KextStat dumpLaptop Detailed Specs LENOVO ThinkPad Edge E320 Model - 1298CTO Mobo - Intel Express HM65 Chipset CPU - Core i5 2520M (Sandy) (2.5 Ghz to 3.2 Turbo) GPU - Intel HD 3000 (650 Mhz can go upto 1.3 Ghz [not sure]) RAM - 2x 4 GB Corsair SO-DIMM 1333MHz Storage - SanDisk 128GB SSD Any help at all will be greatly appreciated.Thank you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TheRacerMaster Posted November 29, 2015 Share Posted November 29, 2015 SSDT won't help you here (other than for PM, which is only prevents further heat output, but won't fix fan control). Due to the fact that many of them are black boxes and OEM-specific, no laptop's Embedded Controller is supported by LPCSensors (in HWSensors), so you'll need to find the proper registers in ACPI. You need to do (fairly complicated) DSDT edits (finding the registers yourself) to enable fan control using ACPISensors. Actually, you might only need to use an OS Check Fix to mask Darwin as Windows in order to make the fans to behave how they do in Windows. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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