Skip to content

OpenCore folder for running macOS High Sierra up to Sequoia on the Lenovo ThinkPad T530 Laptop.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

5T33Z0/Lenovo-T530-Hackintosh-OpenCore

Repository files navigation

Lenovo ThinkPad T530 Hackintosh OpenCore

T530 OpenCore Clover Version MacOS release
10103711

TABLE of CONTENTS


About

OpenCore EFI Folder for running macOS High Sierra all the way up to macOS Sequoia on the Lenovo ThinkPad T530. There's also a Clover version which is capable of running macOS 11 and newer.

⚠️ Important Status Updates
SD Card Reader not working in Sonoma+

Noteworthy Features

  • Contains Patches and Kexts from OpenCore Legacy Patcher (OCLP), such as:
    • Booter Patches so that macOS Big Sur and newer can be installed
    • NVRAM parameters
    • RestrictEvent.kext to install and run macOS Big Sur and newer with MacBookPro10,x SMBIOS (More)
    • Native SMC CPU Power Management in macOS 13+ for optimal CPU Power Management (More).
    • Fully working graphics acceleration for the Intel HD 4000 in macOS 12+ (requires Post-Install root patching with OCLP)
    • Working legacy Broadcom Wi-Fi and Bluetooth in macOS 14 (requires Post-Install root patching with OCLP)
    • Ability to boot macOS 12+ with AMFI enabled thanks to AMFIPass.kext.
  • No patched DSDT – only SSDT hotpatches were used for maximum ACPI-compliance and future macOS-compatibility! Try using a patched DSDT from 2013 with a current version of macOS and you will understand what I mean!
  • Working battery status read-outs without additional DSDT/ACPI patches thanks to ECEnabler.kext
  • 3D Globe in Maps in macOS 12+ thanks to AdvancedMaps.kext
  • IRQ patches fully realized via a custom SSDT – zero binary renames required!
  • Custom AppleALC Layout to support the Audio Jacks of Lenovo Mini Docking Stations 4337 and 4338. It uses Layout-ID 39 and has been integrated into AppleALC since version 1.7.3
  • Working Hibernation

Specs

Component Details
Model Lenovo ThinkPad T530, Model# 2429-62G
Chipset Intel QM77 Express
BIOS Version 2.77, unlocked with 1vyRain
Processor Intel Core i7 3630QM
Memory 16GB Samsung DDR3 1600MHz, Dual-Channel
Minimum: 8GB
Hard Disk Samsung 840 Evo 250GB
Integrated Graphics Intel HD Graphics 4000, 2048 MB RAM assigned
Display 15.6" HD+ TFT Display (1600x900 px)
Audio Realtek ALC269VC Rev.3 (Layout-id:39)
Ethernet Intel 82579LM Gigabit Network Connection
WiFi and Bluetooth Broadcom BCM94352HMB DW1550, 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac
Multicard Reader Ricoh 4-in-1 reader (MMC, SD, SDHC, SDXC)
ExpressCard/34 slot disabled
Docking Station Lenovo ThinkPad 4338 Mini Dock plus Series 3

DOCS

macOS-incompatible Components

  • NVIDIA Optimus GPU must be disabled in BIOS - otherwise no boot!
  • Fingerprint Reader
  • SD Card Reader (not working in macOS 14+). The source code for VoodooSDHC.kext has to be updated. The original version is like 10 years old (build for OSX 10.12).
  • VGA Port – not supported since macOS Mountain Lion: Intel HD Graphics VGA Support

EFI Folder Content (OpenCore)

Click to reveal
EFI
├── BOOT
│   └── BOOTx64.efi
└── OC
    ├── ACPI
    │   ├── SSDT-ALS0.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-BAT1-Disable.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-EXT4.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-EXT5.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-IRQ_FIXES.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-NBCF.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-PM.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-PNLF.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-PRW0.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-PTSWAKTTS.aml
    │   ├── SSDT-SBUS-MCHC.aml
    │   └── SSDT-TEMPToFans.aml
    ├── Drivers
    │   ├── AudioDXE.efi (disabled)
    │   ├── HfsPlus.efi
    │   ├── OpenCanopy.efi
    │   ├── OpenRuntime.efi
    │   └── ResetNvramEntry.efi
    ├── Kexts (loaded based on Min/Max Kernel settings)
    │   ├── AdvancedMap.kext (macOS 12+)
    │   ├── AirportBrcmFixup.kext
    │   ├── AMFIPass.kext (macOS 12+)
    │   ├── AppleALC.kext
    │   ├── AppleIntelCPUPowerManagement.kext (macOS 13+)
    │   ├── AppleIntelCPUPowerManagementClient.kext (macOS 13+)
    │   ├── BlueToolFixup.kext (macOS 12+)
    │   ├── BrcmBluetoothInjector.kext
    │   ├── BrcmFirmwareData.kext
    │   ├── BrcmPatchRAM2.kext
    │   ├── BrcmPatchRAM3.kext 
    │   ├── BrightnessKeys.kext
    │   ├── CryptexFixup.kext (macOS 13+)
    │   ├── ECEnabler.kext
    │   ├── HibernationFixup.kext
    │   ├── IntelMausi.kext
    │   ├── IO80211FamilyLegacy.kext (macOS 14+)
    │   ├── IOSkywalkFamily.kext (macOS 14+)
    │   ├── Lilu.kext
    │   ├── NoTouchID.kext (macOS 10.13 and 10.14)
    │   ├── RestrictEvents.kext (macOS 11+)
    │   ├── SMCBatteryManager.kext
    │   ├── VirtualSMC.kext
    │   ├── VoodooPS2Controller.kext
    │   ├── VoodooSDHC.kext
    │   └── WhateverGreen.kext
    ├── OpenCore.efi
    ├── Resources (NOTE: shows sub-folders only, no files)
    │   ├── Font
    │   └── Image
    │       └── Acidanthera
    │       │   ├── Chardonnay
    │       │   ├── GoldenGate
    │       │   └── Syrah
    │       └── Blackosx
    │       │   └── BsxM1
    │       └── velickovicdj
    │       │   └── EnterTwilight
    │       └── Label
    └── config.plist

Deployment

Please read the following instructions carefully before deploying my EFI folder. Depending on your T530 model, the used WiFi/BT card and macOS version you want to run, adjustments to the config.plist and used kexts may be necessary to adapt the config to your system.

Note

Although this EFI might work with T430 and X230, is was not intended for these ThinkPad models. So don't misuse issue reports for support requests!

Preparing the config.plist

Download the EFI Folder from the Releases section and unpack it. Make sure to read the included Changelog.md as well, since it contains useful explanations.

Open the config.plist and adjust the following settings depending on your system:

  1. ACPI Section:

    • Disable SSDT-PM.aml (unless you have an i7 3630QM as well). Generate your own with ssdtPRGen in Post-Install.
  2. Booter Section (optional):

    • The entries in the MMIO Whitelist are memory regions used by my firmware. Since I don't know if these are used by all T530 BIOSes, I disabled them and the corresponding DevirtualiseMmio Quirk
    • To figure out which one(s) your system use(s), you can follow this guide
    • This is not a necessity, just some fine-tuning.
  3. DeviceProperties: Enable the correct Framebuffer-Patch for your display. The T530 comes with either one of the following display panels: HD+ or HD, supporting different resolutions. Each requires a different framebuffer patch (AAPL,ig-platform-id) with different connector patches:

    AAPL,ig-platform-id 04006601 = HD+ = WSXGA and FullHD. Resolution: ≥ 1600x900 px. (Default)
    AAPL,ig-platform-id 03006601 = HD = SD. Resolution: ≤ 1366x768 px.

    If your T530 has an SD panel, do the following;

    • Go to DeviceProperties
    • Disable the entry PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x2,0x0) by placing # in front of it.
    • Enable #PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x2,0x0) 1366x768 px by deleting the leading # and the description 1366x768 px, so that it looks this: PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x2,0x0).

    💡 HINT: If your screen turns off during boot, you are using the wrong Framebuffer-Patch!

  4. Audio (optional):

    • If you need digital Audio over HDMI/DP, disable/delete No-hda-gfx from the Audio Device Properties in PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1B,0x0).
    • My EFI contains a custom build of AppleALC.kext which only contains layouts 18 and 39 (default) and therefore only is 95 KB in size (instead of 3.6 MB). If you are using a docking station, leave it at 39. If you don't, change it to 18.
    • Bootchime: If you want the bootchime to play, do the following:
      • Under UEFI/Drivers, enable AudioDxe.efi
      • Under EUFI/Audio, enable AudioSupport
      • Make sure ConnectDrivers is enabled
  5. SIP (optional): Under NVRAM/Add/7C436110-AB2A-4BBB-A880-FE41995C9F82, adjust csr-active-config according to the macOS version you want to use. Lowering SIP is mandatory if you want to run macOS 12 and newer in order to install and load Intel HD 4000 Drivers! If you have issues running OCLP in Post-Install, change csr-active-config to FE0F0000 (almost fully disabled).

    • SIP enabled: 00000000 (macOS Big Sur and older only!)
    • SIP disabled:
      • For Big Sur and newer: 03080000(0x803)
      • For macOS Mojave/Catalina: EF070000(0x7EF)
      • For macOS High Sierra: FF030000 (0x3FF)
  6. SMBIOS: Under SystemProductName, select the correct SMBIOS for your CPU and generate a serial, etc. for it. My EFI utilizes Patches and kexts from OpenCore Legacy Patcher which allow using the correct SMBIOS for Ivy Bridge CPUs on macOS 11.3 and newer (Darwin Kernel 20.4+), so native Power Management and OTA System Updates are working oob which wouldn't be possible otherwise past macOS Catalina.

    • For Intel i7: MacBookPro10,1 (Default)
    • For Intel i5: MacBookPro10,2
  7. WiFi and Bluetooth (Read carefully!)

    • Case 1: Intel Wifi/BT Card. In stock configuration, the T530 comes with an Intel WiFi/Bluetooth card, so you need different kexts for WiFi and Bluetooth. It may work with OpenIntelWireless kexts.
      • Check the compatibility list to find out if your card is supported.
      • Remove all kexts containing "Brcm" in the name.
      • Add the required Kexts for your Intel card to EFI/OC/Kexts folder and config.plist before attempting to boot with this EFI!
    • Case 2: 3rd Party WiFi/BT Cards. These require the 1vyrain jailbreak to unlock the BIOS to disable the WiFi Whitelist (not required if the 3rd party card is whitelisted).
      • I use a WiFi/BT Card by Broadcom, so my setup requires AirportBrcmFixup for WiFi and BrcmPatchRAM and additional satellite kexts for Bluetooth. Read the comments in the config for details.
      • BrcmFirmwareData.kext is used for injecting the required firmware for Broadcom devices. Alternatively, you can use BrcmFirmwareRepo.kext which is more efficient but has to be installed into System/Library/Extensions since it cannot be injected by Bootloaders.
      • If you use a WiFi/BT Card from a different vendor than Broadcom, remove the Brcm Kexts and add the Kext(s) required for your card to the kext folder and config.plist before deploying the EFI folder!
  8. Kernel Section

    • Kernel/Patch: If you have an HDD caddy for the DVD drive bay, you can add this kernel patch to your config to enable SATA hot plugging.
    • Kernel/Quirks:
      • If you are using a stock BIOS, you need to enable AppleCpuPmCfgLock Quirk.
      • If you are using the 1vyrain BIOS, CFG-Lock will be disabled by default (not the case for the T430). In this case, you don't need the AppleCpuPmCfgLock Quirk.
      • To figure out if the MSR 0xE2 register of your BIOS is unlocked, add ControlMsrE2.efi to EFI/OC/Tools and your config.plist (under Misc/Tools) and run it from the BootPicker. The output should look like this:
        UNLOCKED_MSR
  9. Misc Section

    • Misc/Boot: HideAuxiliary is enabled. This hides additional items like Recovery and resetting NVRAM. You can reveal them by pressing the space bar in BootPicker. If you want all items to show by default, disable HideAuxiliary.
  10. NVRAM Section

    • Boot-args: (under GUID 7C436110-AB2A-4BBB-A880-FE41995C9F82)
      • brcmfx-country=#a: Sets Wifi Country Code (#a = generic) for Broadcom WiFi cards using AirportBrcmFixup. If you are using an Intel Card, delete this boot argument. Otherwise replace the generic country code with the one for your country listed here. This is recommended to avoid connectivity issues and getting AirDrop to work properly (which I don't use).
  11. PlatformInfo/Generic Section

    • Generate and add Serials and stuff for MacBookPro10,1 with OpenCore Auxiliary Tools or GenSMBIOS, so Facetime will work
  12. Add/enable alternative/optional Kexts:

    • itlwm: Kext for Intel WiFi Cards. Use instead of AirportBrcmFixupif you don't use a Broadcom WiFi Card
    • IntelBluetoothFirmware: Kext for Intel Bluetooth Cards. Use instead of BrcmPatchRam and Plugins if you don't use a Broadcom BT Card
    • NoTouchID: only required for macOS 10.13 and 10.14 so the boot process won't stall while checking for a Touch ID sensor.
    • Feature Unlock: Unlocks additional features like Sidecar, AirPlay to Mac and Continuity Camera.
  13. Increase Max Backlight Brightness Level (optional):

    • Add boot-arg applbkl=0 for increased maximum brightness of the display as defined in SSDT-PNLF.aml instead of letting Whatevergreen handle it. Also available as device property (see Whatevergreen documentation for details).

Used boot arguments and NVRAM variables

  • Boot-args:
    • gfxrst=1: Draws Apple logo at 2nd boot stage instead of framebuffer copying → Smoothens transition from the progress bar to the Login Screen/Desktop when an external monitor is attached.
    • ipc_control_port_options=0: Fixes issues with Firefox not working and electron-based Apps like Discord in macOS 12+ when SIP is lowered.
  • NVRAM variables:
    • OCLP Settings -allow_amfi: Does the same as boot-arg amfi_get_out_of_my_way=0x1 but only when the OpenCore Patcher App is running. Otherwise you can't run the root patcher. But this didn't work the last time I tried this setting might be deprecated.
    • hbfx-ahbm: Lets the system hibernate instead of using regular sleep. Requires HibernationFixup.kext. More details here
    • revblock:media: Blocks mediaanalysisd on Ventura+ (for Metal 1 GPUs). Required so apps like Firefox don't crash. Requires RestrictEvents.kext
    • revpatch:
      • sbvmm: Forces VMM SB model, allowing OTA updates for unsupported models on macOS 11.3 and newer. Requires RestrictEvents.kext.
      • memtab: Adds Memory tab to "About this Mac" section (macOS ≤ 12 only). Requires RestrictEvents.
      • f16c: Disables f16c instruction set reporting in macOS 13.3 or newer to prevent CoreGraphics crashing on Ivy Bridge CPUs

EFI How To

Once you're done adjusting the config.plist, mount your system's ESP and do the following:

  • Backup your current EFI folder on a FAT32 formatted USB flash drive
  • Paste in my EFI folder
  • Restart
  • Perform an NVRAM Reset (in BootPicker, hit Space Bar to reveal the tool)
  • Select macOS to boot

Note

The system may crash the first time when booting macOS Ventura or newer. That's normal. After that, it should work as expected.

BIOS Settings

Click to reveal

Latest BIOS Version: 2.77 DOWNLOAD

Tab Submenu Function Setting
Config USB
  • UEFI BIOS Support
  • USB 3.0 Mode
Enabled
Enabled
Display
  • Boot Display Device:
  • OS Detection for NVIDIA Optimus:
ThinkPad LCD
Disabled
SATA
  • SATA Controller Mode
AHCI
CPU
  • Core Multi-Processing
  • Intel (R) Hyper-Threading Technology
Enabled
Enabled
Security
  • Security Chip
Disabled
UEFI BIOS Update Options
  • Flash BIOS Updating by End-Users
  • Secure Rollback Prevention: Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
  • Memory Protection
Enabled
Virtualization
  • Intel Virtualization Technology
Enabled
I/O Port Access
  • Wireless WAN
  • ExpressCard Slot
  • eSATA Port
  • Fingerprint Reader
  • Antitheft and Computrace
  • Secure Boot
Disabled
Startup
  • UEFI/Legacy Boot
UEFI Only
  • CSM Support
Disabled
  • Boot Mode
Quick
  • Boot Order Lock
Enabled

[!NOTE]

Enable Boot Order Lock after you've set-up the order of the Boot Drives. This prevents WindowsBootManager from taking over the first slot of the boot drives. This way, you don't need to enable the LauncherOption in OpenCore!

Installing macOS

Coming from Windows/Linux: Follow the installation guide by Dortania.

Note

No support from my end is provided for issues related to UBS Installers created in Windows or Linux or when using a Virtual Machine!

Coming from macOS:

  • If you already have macOS installed, you can either download macOS from the App Store, with OCLP or with ANYmacOS. Both can download macOS and create a USB Installer as well.
  • IMPORTANT: When upgrading from macOS Catalina or older to Big Sur and newer, additional preparations are required. Follow my macOS install instructions.

Recommended macOS version

Until recently, my recommendation was macOS Catalina. While testing my own instructions for upgrading from macOS Catalina (or older) to Big Sur, I noticed that Big Sur feels snappier and more responsive overall (although benchmarks are slightly lower).

Big Sur is also the best choice if you're planing to upgrade to macOS Monterey or newer. Because macOS 11.3 introduced a virtualization technology which can be used to trick macOS into thinking that it is running in a VM. This allows installing and booting macOS 12+ with an unsupported SMBIOS designed for Ivy Bridge CPUs which improves CPU Power Management and also allows installing System Updates which wouldn't be possible otherwise.

Post-Install

Apply Root Patches with OpenCore Legacy Patcher (macOS 12+)

If you areinstalling macOS 12 or newer, you need to apply post-install root patches with OpenCore legacy Patcher so that on-board graphics and Wi-Fi/Bluetooth work. Instructions can be found in the macOS Install section.

Disable Gatekeeper (optional)

I disable Gatekeeper on my systems because it is annoying and wants to stop you from running scripts from github etc. To do so, enter sudo spctl --master-disable in Terminal.

This command no longer works in macOS Sequoia – it requires a different method to disable Gatekeeper.

Enable brightness control for external displays

There's a new app called MonitorControl which allows controlling the brightness and contrast of attached external displays right from the menu bar. I tested it with my EIZO monitor that is connected to my docking station via DVI and it's working great. Might not work with every display, though.

Strengthen Security

Once macOS is up and running, you may want to change the following settings to make your system more secure:

  • Misc/Security/SecureBootModel:
    • macOS Big Sur and older: Default
    • macOS Monterey: Disabled (otherwise insta-crash)
    • macOS Ventura: Default (I don't know why but Default works – which it shouldn't…)
  • csr-active-config: 00000000 (macOS 11.x and older only – leave on 03080000 if your system requires root patches!)
  • UEFI/APFS: change MinDate and MinVersion from -1 (disabled) to 0 (default) or use specific values for different versions of macOS.
  • Enable Hibernation (use Terminal or change in Hackintool):
    • Disable PowerNap: sudo pmset -a powernap 0
    • Change Hibernatemode to 25: sudo pmset -a hibernatemode 25

Note

  • Enter nvram 94b73556-2197-4702-82a8-3e1337dafbfb:AppleSecureBootPolicy to check the security level. It should return %01 for medium security. More info here
  • SIP: If you're planning to install macOS Monterey or newer, System Integritiy Protection must be lowered! Because installing the necessary graphics drivers breaks macOS' security seal and the system will crash during boot if it is enabled!
  • MinDate/MinVersion: You should keep a working backup of your EFI folder on a FAT32 formatted USB flash drive before changing these settings, because if they are wrong, the APFS driver won't load and you won't see your disk(s) in the BootPicker!

Fixing CPU Power Management

Follow this guide to generate an SSDT-PM.aml to fix CPU Power Management. CPU Power Management should work fine after that.

Optionally, install Intel Power Gadget to check whether or not the CPU runs within specs. You don't need SMCProcessor and SMCSuperIO kexts to monitor the CPU if you use Intel Power Gadget, btw.

NOTES:

  • Generating an SSDT-PM is necessary if you use a different CPU than i7 3630QM
  • Pre-generated SSDTs for other CPU models used in the T530 can be found here
  • You can add modifiers to the terminal command for building SSDT-PM. For example, you can drop the low frequency from the default 1200 MHz to 900 MHz in 100 MHz increments, but no lower than that. Otherwise the system crashes during boot. I suggest you experiment with the modifiers a bit.

ACPI Power Management in macOS 13+

With the release of macOS Monterey, Apple dropped the plugin-type check for handling CPU Power Management. Since then, the X86PlatformPlugin (Plugin-type 1) is loaded by default – prior to Monterey, plugin-type 0 (ACPI_SMC_PlatformPlugin) was the default. For Haswell and newer this is great because you no longer need SSDT-PLUG to enable Plugin-Type 1. But for Ivy Bridge and older, you now not only need SSDT-PM to inject C-States and P-States but also to declare Plugin-Type 0 usage. But using ACPI CPU Power Management is still possible. For macOS Ventura, it's a different story…

In macOS Ventura, Apple removed the actual ACPI_SMC_PlatformPlugin binary from the kext itself rendering SSDT-PM generated for 'plugin-type' 0 useless, since it can't address a plugin which doesn't exist any more. Instead, the X86PlaformPlugin is loaded. This results in CPU Power Management not working correctly out of the box (no Turbo states, etc.).

So when switching to macOS Ventura or newer, injecting additional kexts to re-enable ACPI CPU Power Management (Plugin-Type 0) is necessary. My EFI is already configured to boot macOS Ventura and use ACPI CPU Power Management, so you don't have to worry about it.

Fixing Sleep issues

If you have issues with sleep, run the following commands in Terminal:

sudo pmset hibernatemode 0
sudo rm /var/vm/sleepimage
sudo touch /var/vm/sleepimage
sudo chflags uchg /var/vm/sleepimage

Other Settings:

If the system still wakes from sleep on its own, check the wake reason. Enter:

pmset -g log | grep -e "Sleep.*due to" -e "Wake.*due to"

If the wake reason is related to RTC (Alarm), do the following:

  • Enter System Settings
  • Open Energy Settings
  • Disable "Wake on LAN"
  • Disable "Power Nap"
  • In Bluetooth Settings, "Advanced Options…" disable the 3rd entry about allowing Bluetooth devices to exit sleep

Note

  • To exit from Sleep you can press a Mouse button. But to wake from Hibernation, you have to press the Fn key or the Power Button.

Reducing boot time

In UEFI/Drivers, disable ConnectDrivers. This reduces the timeout between the LENOVO logo and the BootPicker by 5 to 8 seconds.

Warning

  • Before installing macOS from a USB flash drive, ConnectDrivers needs to be re-enabled, otherwise you won't see it in the BootPicker.
  • With ConnectDrivers disabled, the bootchime cannot be played back since AudioDXE.efi is not loaded.

Swapping Command ⌘ and Option ⌥ Keys

Prior to version 0.7.4 of my OpenCore EFI Folder, the [Command] and [Option] keys were set to "swapped" in the info.plist of VoodooPS2Keyboard.kext by default. So in macOS, the [WINDOWS] key was bound to the [Option] key function and the [ALT] Key was bound to the [Command] key function which felt weird. Therefore, users had to swap these Keys back around in the System Settings so everything worked as expected.

Since then, I've undone the key swap inside the VoodooPS2Keyboard.kext plugin so that the Key bindings are working as expected out of the box. So if you are updating from 0.7.3 or lower to 0.7.4, reset the Keyboard Modifier Keys back to Default in System Settings > Keyboard so everything is back to normal.

If the "<", ">" and "^" Keys are switched/reversed, change Use ISO layout keyboard from false to true in the info.plist of VoodooPS2Keyboard.kext.

Changing Themes

Besides the 3 default themes by Acidanthera included in the OpenCore package, I've added an additional theme by Blackosx called BsxM1 which is set as default. To change the theme to something else, do the following:

  • Open config.plist in OpenCore Auxiliary Tools
  • Go to Misc/Boot
  • Select a different theme from the dropdown menu in PickerVariant
  • Save config.plist and reboot to apply the theme.

To revert these changes, enter Acidanthera\GoldenGate as PickerVariant and change the Flavor for the NVRAM Reset Tool back to Auto.

Eject Button

macOS locks the optical drive sometimes so that you can't open it with the physical eject button – even if no media is present. To fix this you have 2 options:

  • Option 1: Go to System/Library/CoreServices/Menu Extras and double-click on Eject.menu. This adds an Eject button Icon to the Menu Bar.
  • Option 2: Press and hold the INS button (right below the Power Button) until the Eject Icon appears on the screen and the CD tray opens.

Fixing issues with AirportBrcmFixup (Broadcom WiFi Cards only)

I've noticed recently that a lot of crash reports for com.apple.drive.Airport.Brcm4360.0 and com.apple.iokit.IO80211Family are being generated (located under /Library/Logs/CrashReporter/CoreCapture).

This issue is related to Smart Connect, a feature of WiFi routers which support 2,4 gHz and 5 gHz basebands to make the WiFi card switch between the two automatically depending on the signal quality. In my case, turning off Smart Connect resolved the issue.

CPU Benchmark

Screenshot
Benchmark Results

Credits and Thank Yous