Thats what I was thinking as well.
Yes, I am very aware as they take all my disk space. How can I go back in seconds though?
It takes me seconds to restore my MacBook5,1. 10 Minutes if you count booting into Recovery and subsequent reboot. Are you saying it takes you longer than that?
SIP must remain disabled at all times when running Mojave Patcher, as having it enabled will cause issues with patched system files. SIPManager.kext is designed to ensure SIP is always disabled, regardless of the NVRAM preference. You should not attempt to enable SIP when running Mojave Patcher.This one may be simpler to answer and probably has a lot to do with the fact I am running Mojave patched onto an older machine, but...
When I boot into the Cmd + R recovery and enable SIP, it says it was successfully enabled. However... When I log in and check.
View attachment 838667
SIP must remain disabled at all times when running Mojave Patcher, as having it enabled will cause issues with patched system files. SIPManager.kext is designed to ensure SIP is always disabled, regardless of the NVRAM preference. You should not attempt to enable SIP when running Mojave Patcher.
A pre-release being tested by some of us here. So far so good.@pkouame,
Have you released the latest hybrid patches that are compatible to both 10.14.5 final and 10.14.6 beta? I know you mentioned that you were working on a new one. Last time I checked, you have the 1.4.3 release.
Thanks for your efforts.
By the way, did you ever get a chance to dig into why your OpenCL finding revives News/News+ ? I may have missed it.Does anyone notice this new feature after applying the Supplemental Update? I cannot charge my battery when using the MB, only when it is completely shutting down (Might be related to this feature)
View attachment 838536
When I attach the power cord to the MB and the screen is off, it shows this icon in the middle of the screen like on iPhones and iPads.
A pre-release being tested by some of us here. So far so good.
No official support for .6b1 yet, but @TimothyR734 just tested these patches on .6b1 with no adverse effects.
I'll need some time to install .6b1 and review the relevant framework differences (if there are any that matter)
[doublepost=1558645620][/doublepost]
By the way, did you ever get a chance to dig into why your OpenCL finding revives News/News+ ? I may have missed it.
O.k.Newer drivers higher than CUDA Toolkit 6.5 won't deliver any computation functions to any Nvidia Tesla GPUs in Mojave.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CUDA#GPUs_supported
So the only last Mojave working CUDA Driver for Tesla GPUs is this.
do you have the developers beta profile installed as when you check for updates it should say enrolled in the developers beta program and should skip the supplemental updateUpdate issue.
Here's my setup sequence for an unsupported MacBookAir4,2.
I was on 10.14.5 Final and decided to test the latest beta (10.14.6 beta 1). So I signed up for Developers Beta program.
Upon reboot, I was presented with the Mojave 10.14.5 supplemental update. I do not want this update this since first of all, my said device does not have a T2 chip, and read in this thread that it poised some issues if you do.
How can I bypass this supplemental update and update straight to the developer's beta 1 of 10.14.6?
Thanks for any input.
734, post: 27386781, member: 1126371"]do you have the developers beta profile installed as when you check for updates it should say enrolled in the developers beta program and should skip the supplemental update
That is really up to you I was in the same boat with my mid 2009 iMac but so far everything is running smoothly I installed 10.14.4 then upgraded 10.14.5 now 10.14.6 beta 1 with the new patcher but 10.14.3 is the most stable versionAlright! So, haha. I am scared right now to do anything with my iMac.
I noticed that the recent mojave patcher lists a fix for kernal panics. Wow did I ever experience those.
I am running a late 2009 imac 21.5 with a 500gb ssd and 12 gb ram.
I had my 500gb ssd formatted as APFS, and did the update to 10.14.4 through the now outdated, but at the time most recent patcher. Needless to say, it broke everything including the camera.The kernel panics were random, but extremely frequent.
No problem! I'll just reinstall. Oh wait, my installer usb installs a bugged version that kernel panics. No problem! I'll just download the patcher again and make a new usb. After about 10 attempts to make one without a kernel panic, I finally did it, and reinstalled MacOS. Oh wait, same problem. No issue though! I'll just boot in to recovery and install through there! Oh yeah. Even if you could boot recovery on an APFS, it would have been bugged anyway! No problem. Internet recovery, here I come. Oh... That doesn't work.I'll just format the drive and try again. Hmmm. just as I suspected! a completely empty drive with no recovery or internet recovery functionality. At least I have my trusty 10.6 install disc.
lol anyway long story short, I am now at 10.14.3 and have my hard drive formatted as extended journaled so I cant accidently update.
Maybe this is a stupid question. Who cares though because damn I dont want to go through that again haha. My computer was MESSED up, and at one point i considered throwing it in the garbage lol.
Do you think it's safe to try this new patcher with the kernel panic fix, or do you think that because everything is working just dandy right now, I should just keep things as they are, until things aren't working the way I need them to anymore?
Both seem like very real options haha...
Did you click on more info sometimes there might be the beta update if so uncheck the supplemental one and instal 10.14.6 beta 1Yes, it did confirm that I'm enrolled. See screenshot below (on the left side).
View attachment 838694
Thanks.
try unchecking the supplemental update then check for updates see if the beta appears
NEVER rely solely on a patched system. Keep a High Sierra thumbdrive, external HDD, or partition. Something will break sooner or later, and you'll be glad you did.Alright! So, haha. I am scared right now to do anything with my iMac.
I noticed that the recent mojave patcher lists a fix for kernal panics. Wow did I ever experience those.
I am running a late 2009 imac 21.5 with a 500gb ssd and 12 gb ram.
I had my 500gb ssd formatted as APFS, and did the update to 10.14.4 through the now outdated, but at the time most recent patcher. Needless to say, it broke everything including the camera.The kernel panics were random, but extremely frequent.
No problem! I'll just reinstall. Oh wait, my installer usb installs a bugged version that kernel panics. No problem! I'll just download the patcher again and make a new usb. After about 10 attempts to make one without a kernel panic, I finally did it, and reinstalled MacOS. Oh wait, same problem. No issue though! I'll just boot in to recovery and install through there! Oh yeah. Even if you could boot recovery on an APFS, it would have been bugged anyway! No problem. Internet recovery, here I come. Oh... That doesn't work.I'll just format the drive and try again. Hmmm. just as I suspected! a completely empty drive with no recovery or internet recovery functionality. At least I have my trusty 10.6 install disc.
lol anyway long story short, I am now at 10.14.3 and have my hard drive formatted as extended journaled so I cant accidently update.
Maybe this is a stupid question. Who cares though because damn I dont want to go through that again haha. My computer was MESSED up, and at one point i considered throwing it in the garbage lol.
Do you think it's safe to try this new patcher with the kernel panic fix, or do you think that because everything is working just dandy right now, I should just keep things as they are, until things aren't working the way I need them to anymore?
Both seem like very real options haha...
I think so. Back on 10.14.2 I found the same solution that @hvds and others have re-discovered. It doesn't seem necessary on my MacBook7,1 now that USB works without patches. Apple changed something up in 10.14.4/5 USB kexts that actually improved results on unsupported machines for once!Just to be sure, the Arduino thing/problem is only relevant on systems with USB patch?
(Mac mini Mid 2011 works perfectly without USB patch and several original & fake Arduino Nanos)
I did that as well (unchecked the supplemental update). No dice. Thanks.
Thank you JackLuke. It seems is downloaded in my mac. Any step in order to delete it? or any advice to "forget" this updates?NOTE for all: as @jhowarth pointed before, latest official Mojave version for pre-2018 Mac is 18F132 , this May 22th recent 10.14.5 18F203 supplemental update is NOT prompted to any Mojave supported Mac pre-2018, I tested right now from a 2012 MBP I only got a prompt for 10.14.6 beta 1, so it's clear that apple (rightly) doesn't care to offer this T2 CHIP update to unsupported machines, then it's not advisable to download and install it, even if that update won't damage your unsupported Mac, if you accept it and download you'll follow the "Product ID" OTA updates for those T2 Chip products, not a good path especially for non-T2 machines and unsupported Mojave Mac.
Here is the official link for "macOS Mojave 10.14.3 Supplemental Update" (18D109):
https://support.apple.com/kb/DL1993?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US
The (18D109) is a supplemental update not a complete installation.
In addition, many of us could not install this update directly without modifying the installation package. For that you can follow this detailed procedure:
Move "macOSUpd10.14.3Supplemental.pkg" file to the desktop
Open Terminal and writes this:
cd ~/Desktop
Press enter
pkgutil --expand macOSUpd10.14.3Supplemental.pkg NewFolder
Press enter
Wait a few minutes
Go to the "NewFolder" folder created on your desktop and open the "Distribution" file with a text editor
Add: return true;
at the end of this line: function InstallationCheck(prefix) {
Like this: function InstallationCheck(prefix) {return true;
Add: return true;
at the end of this line: function VolumeCheck(prefix) {
Like this: function VolumeCheck(prefix) {return true;
Save the file
If you have not closed the terminal, write or simply copy this:
pkgutil --flatten NewFolder macOSUpd10.14.3SupplementalModified.pkg
Press enter and wait a few minutes for the package to re-create
Once the operation is completed, launch the file "macOSUpd10.14.3SupplementalModified.pkg"
But if you closed the terminal, re-open it and writes this:
cd ~/Desktop
Press enter
pkgutil --flatten NewFolder macOSUpd10.14.3SupplementalModified.pkg
Press enter and wait a few minutes for the package to re-create
Once the operation is completed, launch the file "macOSUpd10.14.3SupplementalModified.pkg"
Be careful if you have several OS on more disks/partitions in your mac because these modifications make it possible to install this update on any OS disk/partition.
AT THE BEGINNING OF THE INSTALLATION BE CAREFUL TO CHOOSE THE DISK/PARTITION OF MOJAVE AND NO OTHER.
Nasty issue. A MacBook firmware suplemental update has shown up two days ago. My Hackintosh is not even a laptop. I have clicked install. The result was an OS much, much slower, unusable. Reinstalled and checked not to automatically download updates. Yesterday, I had a block on Safari and rebooted. The boot was slow. Something similar has happened in the past when a bunch of Gatekeeper/XProtect/MRT was faulty installed and some system files were corrupted. So:
1. Could someone please check in System Information, in Software/Installations if there were some Gatekeeper/XProtect/MRT updates yesterday installed? Just to rule this out.
2. Does the patch contain some components take from a MacBook Pro installation of Mojave? My Hackintosh is disguised by Clover into an iMac from 2009, nothing close to a MacBook Pro with a T2 chip, as this update says.