wheie.blogg.se

Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode
Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode









mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode

Interests: At home, I have the following computers.ġ.Is there a guru out there who knows how to achieve the same behaviour like the Linux noapic flag? I however don't know much about XNU, so I could have made wrong combinations. The only difference made the acpi=ht: the kernel came over this step just to panic a few lines later. Noapic, nolapic, disableapic, pci=noacpi, acpi=off, acpi=ht How could I load XNU with a noapic equivalent to Linux?įollowing some lists with XNU boot parameters ( or ) I tried out these flags with no success: OK, the MacBook was not to be thrown away, but I prefer keeping OS X instead of going Linux.

mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode

And look, what a miracle - Linux booted with only the 'noapic' flag set !!! The full blown system came up and ran nicely and flawlessly. Then I accidentally put a Knoppix Live DVD in the tray and started playing with the Linux boot flags. Well, the next obvious step was to reset the SMC, PRAM and NVRAM. The result was the same, which led me to the point, that it has to be a hardware malfunction.

mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode

Then I tried to start from the installation DVD. īooting my Mac mini off the MacBook's HDD in target disk mode however worked perfectly! So the HDD and the file system was OK (and yes, I also checked the disk - no errors). I tried almost every secure mode, single user. I then started in target disk mode and modified the kernel flags in '' with no success. The kernel stopped loading right after these lines: Getting a bootable system was sorted out earlier in the thread, as for running tiger on a CRT iMac as long as it is a slot loader it can run 10.4.11 without any help what so ever.After a nightly freeze of my MacBook the OS X didn't boot any more. They were able to install Panther, but like the B&W, Tiger does not simply install. I don't remember, but I think you might have problems installing Tiger on a CRT iMac. You could even burn the firmware update onto the CD as well and just run it from the booted CD and not have to put OS9 on the hard drive at all. There are two other ways you can get OS9 onto that machine-starting the iMac up in firewire target disk mode to mount it's hard drive on another Mac, or by simply creating an OS9 CD by burning your OS9 onto a CD, boot up the iMac from the CD, and then drag and drop the OS9 that's on the CD onto the iMac's hard drive. Those models are famous for developing faulty PAV boards. Were you able to transfer the OS9 over with USB? That blue screen does not look promising. I don't get it, your photo shows a system.











Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode