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Mac OS X Leopard For AMD And Intel v10.5.1
nenopDate: Thursday, 2009-05-21, 2:17 PM | Message # 1
Lord of Warez
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Mac OS X Leopard For AMD And Intel v10.5.1

Now you can enjoy the many features of MAC OS X Leopard
on your ordinary Intel or AMD PC..!!

Tools needed
1. Acronis Disk Director Suite
2. Everest Ultimate ( Needed to Check CPU and PC Specs )

DISK IS PREPATCHED this is ISO Format so burn image to a disk and your ready to install

simply.!!

READ INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY FIRST

Optional but Highly recommend: install Tiger first. This can be done
by inserting Tiger DVD on your computer and make sure you boot from it.
Usually that’s done if you press F8 or F12 or whatever key combination to
give you the option to choose what disk/cd drive you want to boot from.
Or you can always change boot device in BIOS setup.
Select your CD/DVD drive. And select your language and when the
welcome screen shows up

1. Select Utilities -> Disk Utility
2. Select your partition that you want to be OSX and go to the Erase tab
3. For Volume Format, select Mac OS Extended (Journaled),
set volume name as “Leopard“(no quotes, case sensitive)
4. Click Erase. Now the partition should not be grey, it should be black to
indicate that it is active.
5. Close out of the Disk Utility and move onwards with installation.

Use “Customize” option and unselect all packages there.
Just install base system. By installing Tiger first, the partition
would be properly formatted and activated, which eliminate any
potential problem. Now reboot and remove the Tiger DVD.

2. Install Leopard.

Insert Leopard DVD, and make sure to select booting from DVD.
The installer will load(it will take a while, be patient). If you have Tiger installed,
don’t format the partition, just install it over the Tiger partition. Otherwise,
same approach as Tiger installation, use Disk Utility to setup the partition.

Important: Use Customize… button and unselect all packages there.
Then proceed to installation. When it’s done, reboot. And make sure
that your USB/Pen Drive is connected to your PC.

Patch Leopard Installation

After the reboot, also make sure you do the same step above:
Press whatever key combination to give you the option to choose
your boot device: Now Select your CD/DVD drive.

Once the setup is loaded(again, long wait, be patient), select your language.
When the welcome screens shows up, select UTILITIES-TERMINAL.
The terminal will now open. We will now browse to our Thumb Drive;

In the command line, type:

cd /Volumes/123/files

Lets now run the script. This will patch the installation so it will boot properly:

./9a581PostPatch.sh

Let it run. You can answer yes when removing the ACPUPowerManagement.kext

Reboot.

The Bootfix patch

After reboot, if the system boots into Leopard fine, ignore this part
and head to next section to setup multi boot. Otherwise, you might
encounter blinking cursor or “HFS+ Error”, follow the steps below then

If you install Leopard without Tiger first, the system might still boot into
Windows instead or leave a system unbootable at all. Even the tboot loader trick
(see below) wouldn’t work. In this case, you need to repair the installation
and setup boot property for it.

1. Reboot using the Leopard DVD, make sure the USB pen drive is connected.
2. Open a terminal after everything finally loads.
3. Find out what disk your leopard was installed on by issuing this command
(my machine was rdisk0s2, will use rdiskXsY below, substitute accordingly)

diskutil list

4. Active the partition

fdisk -e /dev/rdiskX
fdisk: 0>update
fdisk:*0> f Y
“Partition 2 marked active”
fdisk:*0> w
Device could not be accessed exclusively.
A reboot will be needed for changes to take effect. OK? [n]y
Writing MBR at offset 0.
fdisk: 0> q

5.Now goto bootfix directory by typing:

cd /Volumes/123/files/bootfix

and do the following

./dd if=/usr/standalone/i386/boot1h of=/dev/rdiskXsY bs=512 count=1
umount /Volumes/Leopard
./startupfiletool -v /dev/rdiskXsY /usr/standalone/i386/boot
./bless -device /dev/diskXsY -setBoot -verbose

reboot

Post Installation: setup multi-boot

2. Now you’re already in the exciting Leopard! After initial setup, load up Terminal

(Applications/Utilities) within OSX and type

sudo nano /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/com.apple.Boot.plist

edit the Darwin time-out flag accordingly:

Timeout
10

reboot and now you can choose Mac OSX/XP/Vista using Leopard’s boot loader.

3. Optional: you can also setup Windows as default OS and use
windows’ OS selector to launch OSX.

So reboot and select Windows partition, load Windows. Open a
command prompt(if you’re using Vista, make sure it’s running as administrator).
Use diskpart to mark the Windows partition active.

1. Type diskpart
2. If you have more than one disk, at the DISKPART prompt, type:
list disk
3. At the DISKPART prompt, type:
select disk x
Select the disk, x, where the partition you want to mark as active in
4. At the DISKPART prompt, type:
list partition
5. At the DISKPART prompt, type:
select partition y
Select the partition, y, you want to mark as active.
6. At the DISKPART prompt, type:
active
to active the selected partition and system will boot from it next time.
7. At the DISKPART prompt, type:
exit
to quit the diskpart program

This will mark Windows partition as active, and the system will
boot off it next time. If the PC has Windows XP installed, get
this tboot(512 bytes only, a revised version of chain0 loader,
support multi HDD as well as loading OSX on extended partition)
file and put it to the same directory as ntldr(usually C:\),
adding the following line to boot.ini

c:\tboot=”Mac OSX Leopard”

If the PC is Vista only, put ntldr(get one from your XP installation CD),
tboot and a boot.ini file to your Vista boot partition, for example

Code:
[boot loader]
timeout=0
default=c:\tboot

[operating systems]

c:\tboot=”Mac OSX Leopard”

Vista will automatically detect and add the Leopard entry on next boot.

Also, for Vista users, you may use bcdedit to add tboot, but the
ntldr way is much much more easier. Anway, if you prefer the
native Vista bootloader, here is how:

1.put tboot on Vista boot partition, usually C:\
2.Open a command prompt and make sure it’s running as administrator and type:
bcdedit /create /d “Mac OSX Leopard” /application bootsector
This will retrun a {ID}
3. Use the command line below to add the tboot, replace the {ID} accordingly:

bcdedit /set {ID} device boot

bcdedit /set {ID} path \tboot

bcdedit /displayorder {ID} /addlast

That’s all. Enjoy the new Leopard!

Available for users only

 
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