Go to the Boot options tab, use the arrow keys. Restart your system and press F2 multiple times, you should now enter the bios. Select the OS X partition and press Enter, OS X will boot. Now Clover has been installed to the EFI partition, now it is time to add the boot option to the UEFI boot menu. The system will now reboot, and Clover should load. Move up with the arrow keys until Clover is highlighted, press +. Clover has now been added to the boot menu. Press tab again, select ok, and press Enter. Now press tab and enter: EFI\BOOT\Clover圆4.efi Now enter a name, i use Clover, press tab, and select either HDD (If you have Clover installed to the EFI partition) or USB (if you have installed Clover to a USB device on a FAT32 partition), you can select it with the arrow keys. My setup will probably differ from yours, change them accordingly, select add boot option and press enter. (What keys you can use, are described at the bottom of the screen.) Now Clover has been installed to the EFI partition, now it is time to add the boot option to the UEFI boot menu. The screenshots are from a Phoenix Bios, don't know about the others. I hope someone will take the time to modify this tutorial, to make it beginner friendly, or just remove it, if something like this already exists.
To install it to the EFI partition, i took information from the Chameleon guide, found here: Īnd modified it to suit my BIOS's needs. Read about what UEFI can and can not do, went through the Clover documentation, although, i did not understand much about it, until i actually got it to boot. I tried every option on the installer, could not make it work, so i figured, let's do it manually. Personally the installer package did not make it possible for me to add the option in the bios, nor boot my OS X installation anymore, that is mainly the reason why i wrote this poor excuse of a guide
It needs editing, perhaps a lot, but i thought i would post it here.Ĭlover comes with an installer package, and people will drop folders on the web everywhere (System specific), but never a descent tutorial on how to actually UEFI boot can be found (perhaps i did not look into this enough) Just a copy/paste from that topic, so the guide does contain some information that is not present or irrelevant. Well, i had to write a little tutorial on how to do this: