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Modified BOOT-132 enables vanilla install from retail Leopard


apowerr

Sorry, I know that I'm a bit late to post this.

An explanation of how this works

Original thread by f41qu3 - report your discoveries and successes here.

Questions & problems go here

Developed a configuration that works? post it here for the next guy

 

David Eliott has just released a new version of his modified boot-132 bootloader.

One of the new things it can do is to load kexts from an .img file which contains kexts (or even an mkext) and boot Leo.

That means you can have two mkexts, one folder with kexts on the .img file and the folder with kexts from your installed system

or even two folders with mkexts.

How does it work?

 

Basically, you create a flat dmg with the kexts in a folder and the bootloader will load them for you. This means quite a lot;

you can boot from a retail Leo DVD and install it, you can update straight from apple, you can reinstall and not have to add

the same kexts to your install every time. The bootloader behaves like the linux kernel: you can use an mboot (a patched syslinux

was used) compatible bootloader which tells to boot-dfe about the .img file (the ramdisk or initrd, as it's known by the linux users)

and boot-dfe is going to use the kexts (or mkext) from it.

What does it do?

 

This new boot-dfe has been tested with the retail Leopard DVD and it can boot, install and run Leopard without having to build

a modified DVD.

 

This is how it's done: you burn an ISO (which has the bootloader on it) to a CD/DVD, after it gets to the boot

prompt, you press ESC or ENTER and it prompts for a new BOOT DEVICE, you swap the BOOT CD/DVD with the LEO Retail DVD, you press

enter and it shows you the name of the bootable partition from the DVD, you press enter and Leo starts to load.

 

Quick resume about "oh, what to do now?"

 

#1 - Burn .iso on a CD;

#2 - Boot this CD;

#3 - When Darwin prompt appear, eject CD and put Mac OS X Leopard Retail DVD;

#4 - Press enter (or -v and enter...wherever...)

#5 - After install, boot using CD boot again and install .kext needed...and usual files.

#6 - Done!

 

For the time being, you cannot have this bootloader on an USB stick and have it boot the Retail Leopard DVD. The reason why this

happens is related to the way the BIOS handles DVDs and optical media: there's no BOOT DEVICE associated with an optical drive

which the BIOS has not booted from. Basically, this is like the disk swap trick known to the PlayStation gamers.

You can already put this on an USB stick/CD/DVD and boot a vanilla install (vanilla= no added kext, no replaced kext on the partition).

 

As usual, this only works for compatible machines(that means you still can't boot a vanilla system on AMD, they need specialised patches).

 

What are you going to do in the future?

 

David Eliott said he'd merge some of the things from Chameleon into boot-dfe. Those involved in the development of Chameleon will merge

the support for ramdisks into Chameleon and more effort will go into making the distribution 100% legal.

Work might(read: should, in the very close future) also go into making Chameleon boot the Retail DVDs when loading the bootloader from the HDD.

 

User guide and link to the ISO

 

This ISO needs to be modded (add dsmos to the Extensions folder) in order to be able to boot Leo.

 

Credits for this go to:

 

David Eliott: for modding boot to allow us to boot from Retail Leopard DVDs;

 

Kabyl: for modding boot to allow the usage of a separate folder on the disk and merging features from Chameleon to boot-dfe-146;

 

bumby: for compiling syslinux and figuring out how to build the ISO

 

Download Original project kexts: http://www.mediafire.com/?uwd9dtttjfk

 

Download modified kexts: http://www.mediafire.com/?1ne1zbl4znv

 

Superhai Method to edit image: http://forum.insanelymac.com/index.php?s=&...st&p=803725

 

STiCKpIN Method to boot from USB Stick (needs Windows): http://forum.insanelymac.com/index.php?sho...mp;#entry805274

 

HMBT Auto-Patch for edit image: (Beta) http://homepage.mac.com/f41qu3/.Public/CDBoot_RC2.sh

 

Cheerz,

I find that the HMBT Auto-Patch method is the easiest to use. This is a huge milestone for the OSx86 project. After installing with this method 10.5.0-10.5.4 works perfectly ;)

For help or information, please post in the original thread by f41qu3.


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I am semi-new to leopard, and mac, and apple as of Dec. 2007. i took a leap and bought me a MacBook Pro with leopard having never used anything mac related before. I was STUPID to not do this before. :( I love Leopard now. however, although i have been a windows user (curse words i know) since before windows even existed and i know a lot of the tricks to windows, i dont know many to leopard or mac platforms. Having said that,......here's my problem

 

I have a Dell Inspiron E1505 with Intel Centrino Duo processor. i have tried using the IATKOS ISO with no luck, i have tried as of yesterday using the KALYWAY ISO with no luck, and have now found this BOOT-132 stuff and it almost works for me. I NEED SOME HELP. i love experimenting with this stuff and i want to put leopard on my PC probably for the same reason most of you want too. I just want to do it. that and i love leopard, which we've already established. When i follow the instructions that are listed at the beginning of this forum, i have trouble the moment the grey screen with the apple logo appears. it reboots instantly every time. next round i may use a -v and it goes a long ways and eventually gets to a grey screen with no logo, and an almost stuck, ever so horribly slow beach ball, and a system that just stops responding. I let it sit for more than an hour tonight and no luck. I haven't got beyond this. Using the kalyway disk, i actually get to the point where i can use the disk utility and it starts installing. i get to 'about one minute' left on the progress bar and it eventually says install failed.

 

I did not buy a retail DVD BUT i did get a "recovery DVD" from apple with my MBPro, however, trouble one day led them to send me a OSX 2 Disk Install set for leopard. and this is what i'm trying to use with the BOOT-132 disk. Does anyone know if this is a No NO for some reason. i assume its just like a retail set with a different label. but like i said, i'm still semi new at this stuff.

 

Any info that could help would be very much appreciated.

 

Thanks

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Sure.

 

These are the files you need for using it on a USB Disk. I haven't actually tried it myself, but it should work. If it doesn't, let me know.

 

http://rapidshare.com/files/127729423/OSx8...skFiles.zip.htm

 

I have tried these files but they seem not to be working for me. Is there a special way of extracting them to the USB Disk?

 

Also I have tried the generic CD,

picture1up3.png

picture3qr8.png

after swapping the discs and pressing enter, I can't seem to find the DVD drive, 80 to 83 gives me my 4 SATA HDDs. So I tried 84 and nothing is happening. Is it because my DVD drive is IDE?

 

For the Specs ref: Signature

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I have tried these files but they seem not to be working for me. Is there a special way of extracting them to the USB Disk?

 

Also I have tried the generic CD,

after swapping the discs and pressing enter, I can't seem to find the DVD drive, 80 to 83 gives me my 4 SATA HDDs. So I tried 84 and nothing is happening. Is it because my DVD drive is IDE?

 

80...83 are the boot device numbers for your hard disks. 9f is what you must type to boot the DVD. ;)

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Let me see if I have this right:

 

(1) This gives users the ability to add extensions for unsupported hardware from an alternate source

 

(2) Better-matching kexts can be loaded in leu of some of Apple's troublesome unsupported kexts, namely the infamous AppleCPUPowerManagement.

 

(3) AFAIK, DontStealMacOS.kext must be removed for dsmos.kext to work. Does this eliminate the need for removing DontStealMacOS, or is that already somehow handled by Chameleon?

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80...83 are the boot device numbers for your hard disks. 9f is what you must type to boot the DVD. :)

 

Thanks Sabr

I guess the Leopard OS X DVD (7.50GB) I got from the green demon is not the retail one then, because 9f seems not to be working as well.

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Sorry, I know that I'm a bit late to post this.

An explanation of how this works

Original thread by f41qu3

 

I find that the HMBT Auto-Patch method is the easiest to use. This is a huge milestone for the OSx86 project. After installing with this method 10.5.0-10.5.4 works perfectly :o

For help or information, please post in the original thread by f41qu3.

 

 

Why did this work for me 1 week ago and now it will not get past 1 second of apple screen. Updated all the way through 10.5.4. Installed Ubuntu with vista on another hd. Tried to load chain in grub for leopard. After that would not boot from the boot disk. Cleaned both drives and it would not reinstall after that either. What happened?

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I have tried these files but they seem not to be working for me. Is there a special way of extracting them to the USB Disk?

 

Also I have tried the generic CD,

picture1up3.png

picture3qr8.png

after swapping the discs and pressing enter, I can't seem to find the DVD drive, 80 to 83 gives me my 4 SATA HDDs. So I tried 84 and nothing is happening. Is it because my DVD drive is IDE?

 

For the Specs ref: Signature

 

Hi Mate,

 

did you manage to get it working? I typed 9f but it doesn't boot from the install dvd, I have the boot 132 on a USB stick.

 

Please can you help

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Thanks Sabr

I guess the Leopard OS X DVD (7.50GB) I got from the green demon is not the retail one then, because 9f seems not to be working as well.

 

The 2 digit boot device ID isn't determined on what DVD you use. As xfidelity said, just press enter when it asks for the boot device ID.

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I have booted up the boot loader from USB and I got to the screen that asks for the bot device ID,

I have pressed Enter but all it shows is the main drive ID, and wll not boot the Retail DVD.

 

Please can you help Sabr.

 

NSCXP2005

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I have booted up the boot loader from USB and I got to the screen that asks for the bot device ID,

I have pressed Enter but all it shows is the main drive ID, and wll not boot the Retail DVD.

 

Please can you help Sabr.

 

NSCXP2005

 

Type 9f when it asks for the boot device ID...

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Hi sabr,

 

I typed 9f and then enter at the darwin boot prompt, but all I get is the Apple logo screen and nothing happens, it just sits there.

 

Any ideas what is wrong?

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What difference from this topic and http://forum.insanelymac.com/index.php?showtopic=113288

 

Think same thread. If is same, I reques close this (because two same threads and this here has only 3 pages and there has 13).

 

:)

 

um, this one is the front page edition.. The main one in news & updates is for progress & information, there is also an italian one with the same title, and one for help, and one for resources.. this way things stay somewhat sorted & separated to avoid the endless mess of questions, suggestions, requests, files and guides all mixed up in 1 thread :)

 

[edit]

Good to advertise about ask for help there? smile.gif

 

Good call, f4lqu3, first post updated.

 

Original thread by f41qu3 - report your discoveries and successes here.

Questions & problems go here

Developed a configuration that works? post it here for the next guy

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um, this one is the front page edition.. The main one in news & updates is for progress & information, there is also an italian one with the same title, and one for help, and one for resources.. this way things stay somewhat sorted & separated to avoid the endless mess of questions, suggestions, requests, files and guides all mixed up in 1 thread :)

 

Good, thanx Hagar. Good to advertise about ask for help there? :)

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After typing 9f/enter, press F8 when it asks for boot options, and type -v then press enter. Tell us what's wrong... And if you have any more problems, use this topic: http://forum.insanelymac.com/index.php?showtopic=114651

 

Hi Sabr,

 

Just to qualify here, the optical drive won't always show up as 9f. I have had better luck on most systems by just hitting enter and the Leo DVD is identified with the defaults used to access the Boot-132 loader.

 

As a hint though, wait for the DVD to spin up in the drive before hitting enter. I've had problems when I've hit the key too early and the loader fails to find the DVD...

...............

And I just read your response above. Ooops!

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Is the whole "iso making" process diferent for each machine??

 

Coz I didn't quite understand how it's done... If it's not diferent, why not have a downloadable .iso ready o burn??

 

All those comand lines freak me out!

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