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Before doing anything else, please set your boot-args. | Before doing anything else, please set your boot-args. | ||
− | On macOS | + | On macOS Sierra (10.12), OS X El Capitan (10.11), OS X Mavericks (10.9), and OS X Mountain Lion (10.8) : |
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | <syntaxhighlight lang="bash"> | ||
sudo nvram boot-args="-v keepsyms=1" | sudo nvram boot-args="-v keepsyms=1" | ||
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− | This will take effect the next time you reboot. The argument <code>-v</code> will make your boot screen verbose instead of just showing the Apple logo, the argument <code>keepsyms=1</code> will make your panic reports more useful for us, and the argument <code>kext-dev-mode=1</code> (OS X Yosemite ONLY) will allow you to load your custom-built, unsigned kexts kernel extensions. Note that as of OS X El Capitan, kext-dev-mode is obsolete and does nothing. If you are on macOS Sierra (10.12) or OS X El Capitan, you should remove kext-dev-mode from your boot-args to avoid confusion. | + | This will take effect the next time you reboot. The argument <code>-v</code> will make your boot screen verbose instead of just showing the Apple logo, the argument <code>keepsyms=1</code> will make your panic reports more useful for us, and the argument <code>kext-dev-mode=1</code> (OS X Yosemite ONLY) will allow you to load your custom-built, unsigned kexts kernel extensions. Note that as of OS X El Capitan, kext-dev-mode is obsolete and and does nothing. If you are on macOS Sierra (10.12) or OS X El Capitan, you should remove kext-dev-mode from your boot-args to avoid confusion. |
If you are a developer, you may want <code>debug=0x144</code> in your boot-args as well, as explained here: [[Development]] | If you are a developer, you may want <code>debug=0x144</code> in your boot-args as well, as explained here: [[Development]] |