Wiki The DSDT (Differentiated System Description Table) is the main table in the ACPI part of a computer's BIOS. The Advanced Configuration and Power Interface (ACPI) defines a large number of tables that provide the interface between an ACPI-compliant operating system and system firmware. These allow description of system hardware in a platform-independent manner in ACPI Machine Language (AML).
Dsdt-editor.png The main editor windows allows the user to open a DSL file or extract the DSDT from IOReg. It has some useful resources, like syntax highlighting, navigation tree and some options that came with the text editor component it uses, like regex matching, auto completion, jump to pair, etc. Extracting DSDT from BIOS. One of the simplest ways to extract your DSDT from your BIOS is by using DSDT Editor.Once you have downloaded DSDT Editor, open it and press File --> Extract DSDT.
The problem is that OS X has an incomplete ACPI implementation which supports only a subset of DSDT. Modifying the DSDT allows the user to better support their hardware. For example, fixing Time Machine and the UUID 35 error is possible after modifying the DSDT. To patch your DSDT, you must either use a new table file that someone else has provided, or extract and modify your own. Then tell your bootloader to use the new DSDT file instead of the BIOS.
On a few motherboards it is also possible to replace the BIOS with an updated BIOS with a patched DSDT. Preparations • Setting Up on Windows Install AIDA64 AIDA64 is a system information, diagnostics, and auditing program that runs on Microsoft Windows operating systems. It displays detailed information on the components of a computer. Information can be saved to file in formats such as HTML, CSV, or XML. Download and install AIDA64 from official website Open AIDA64 → Right Click → ACPI Tool → Save DSDT → Save DSDT As acpi_dsdt.bin Save Table → Save SSDT As acpi_ssdt-1.bin, acpi_ssdt-2.bin. Video Debug → Video BIOS dump Rename File acpi_dsdt.bin → acpi_dsdt.aml acpi_ssdt.bin → acpi_ssdt.aml vgabios3_gpu1_10DE0A66.rom → 10DE_0A66.rom • Setting Up on OS X Install DSDT Editor For Mac and Chameleon Wizzard on OS X. Note that DSDT Editor need to have Java Run Time support.
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Use open DSDT Editor For Mac acpi_dsdt.aml, press F5 to compile, click Fix Errors, can't have Errors, Warning and Remarks can be temporarily ignored. No Error, save as DSDT.aml, use the same method to create SSDT. • Chameleon Wizzard Basic Setting Put DSDT.aml, SSDT.aml, and graphics rom to /Extra floder.
DSDT Editor provides additional, and very much needed, functionality over DSDTSE (Simple Editor), although I generally continue to use DSDTSE in preference to DSDT Editor. DSDTSE will not, or cannot, detect instances where an assignment is being made from a wide variable or value (e.g., 64 or 32 or 16 bits) to a less wide variable (e.g., 32 or 16 bits or 8 bits). DSDT Editor can, and does.
My strong preference is to use DSDTSE for all or almost all development, until I get a clean and working DSDT, and then pass it, or rather 'wash it', through DSDT Editor to catch any lingering errors, such as the assignment statement errors. But, DSDT Editor can also catch and eliminate other errors, through use of the 'Fix Errors' option of the error dialog of the compile option. Both tools are useful to me, and I have come to depend upon DSDTSE for its rather simple interface, and also on DSDT Editor for its superior error detection and its optional correction. This is especially helpful in a very complicated DSDT modification, such as porting Mieze's USB 1.1/2.0/3.0 compatibility mods from her MSI B75MA-P45 implementation (four slot) to another MSI or, especially, a non-MSI motherboard. Using both DSDTSE and DSDT Editor, I have successfully ported her mods to MSI B75A-G43 (seven slot) and ASRock H77M (four slot) motherboards.