OCB: LoadImage Failed - Unsupported

Specs: Lenovo Ideacentre K430 (OEM, Lenovo CIZ75M) i5-2500k Intel HD 3000 IGPU 8GB RAM

OpenCore 0.7.6 (Released at least 12 hrs ago) OS X 10.11 El Capitan Recovery

After i get to the picker, i select the recovery dmg...

OCB: LoadImage Failed - Unsupported

I will try using High Sierra, with the EFI folder from this post (https://www.reddit.com/r/Hackintosh/comments/rafmzx/the_best_hackintosh_i_have_ever_made/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=mweb) (will be sent a bit later but i will wait)

For now i will stay tuned for 10.11.

Thanks!

Author: @CraftCoder_08

3 comments :

  1. The format for UEFI-Drivers in the config.plist changed from how propertree does it, as just an array, or a list. Now it’s supposed to be done in the same way as Kernel-add, an array, with drivers represented by a numerical dictionary, with strings “path” which is just the name of the driver, comment, & an “enabled” Boolean.
    You can verify this is the problem by opening OpenShell from the Opencore menu, navigating to your EFI partition’s OC folder, then drivers, & typing “load *” it should say your drivers were loaded successfully, & then type exit, & choose your bootable media as usual, & it will boot.

    ReplyDelete
  2. The format for UEFI-Drivers in the config.plist changed from how propertree does it, as just an array, or a list. Now it’s supposed to be done in the same way as Kernel-add, an array, with drivers represented by a numerical dictionary, with strings “path” which is just the name of the driver, comment, & an “enabled” Boolean.
    You can verify this is the problem by opening OpenShell from the Opencore menu, navigating to your EFI partition’s OC folder, then drivers, & typing “load *” it should say your drivers were loaded successfully, & then type exit, & choose your bootable media as usual, & it will boot.

    ReplyDelete
  3. The format for UEFI-Drivers in the config.plist changed from how propertree does it, as just an array, or a list. Now it’s supposed to be done in the same way as Kernel-add, an array, with drivers represented by a numerical dictionary, with strings “path” which is just the name of the driver, comment, & an “enabled” Boolean.
    You can verify this is the problem by opening OpenShell from the Opencore menu, navigating to your EFI partition’s OC folder, then drivers, & typing “load *” it should say your drivers were loaded successfully, & then type exit, & choose your bootable media as usual, & it will boot.

    ReplyDelete