According to interpolated information obtained from graphics cards of similar efficiency levels, the game is likely to show fluent frame rates. May Run Fluently – The performance of this graphics cards with this game is not well explored yet. According to interpolated information obtained from graphics cards of similar efficiency levels, the game is likely to stutter and show low frame rates.įluent – According to all known benchmarks with the specified graphical settings, this game is expected to run at 25fps or moreįluent – According to all known benchmarks with the specified graphical settings, this game is expected to run at 35fps or moreįluent – According to all known benchmarks with the specified graphical settings, this game is expected to run at 58fps or more May Stutter – The performance of this graphics cards with this game is not well explored yet. According to interpolated information obtained from graphics cards of similar efficiency levels, the game is likely to stutter and show low frame rates. Again, I'm no expert on bit masks, but I suspect that if you follow the pattern quoted above for a set of eight objects instead of five, you'd be able to set certain flags without having to do so via DeviceProperties.Stutter – The performance of this graphics cards with this game is not well explored yet. In my case, I wanted them all, so I ran 11111111 through Hackintool's binary calculator, and got 255 as the decimal value. radpg=15 enables the first four flags, but what if we want any more? The bitmask to represent this in binary is 01101 or 13 in decimal Suppose in a set of 5 objects, we have picked the 1st, 3rd, and 4th object. It's a bit mask of the following values: "CAIL_DisableDrmdmaPowerGating",įor those who aren't familiar with bit masks (like I wasn't before this little adventure):
I'm not sure why radpg isn't more intuitively documented.
#Amd firepro w4100 hackintosh how to#
If anyone knows how to solve any of the above, please share! Edit 3: Generating a slide seems to be working beautifully. Don't know if it's my RAM or something with OpenCore. Edit 2: Disabling XMP seems to have netted more improvements. I have not tried Clover on Catalina nor do I intend to, as I was hoping to build this on OpenCore.Įdit: Still somewhat there, but I believe setting the above + NVRAM > WriteFlash to seems to have reduced this greatly. Catalina on OpenCore is much more stable, but the freezing has not entirely gone away.
Switching back to Clover did not exhibit the same freezing. See below for radpg explanation.Īfter switching to OpenCore while on High Sierra, I began experiencing bad freezing, with a lot of them bringing the whole OS down. Edit: Fixed! With radpg=15 it needed help, but radpg=255 allows it to fully initialize without any help. Booting with just the Dell results in low refresh. Booting with just the ASUS and then plugging the Dell in seems to be the smoothest way right now. I suspect because it's because it's a higher res/refresh, but I'm not sure how to get it seamless. Replugging my secondary ASUS VN248Q-P does not fix it for some reason it has to be the Dell one. I also need to unplug/plug my Dell S2716DG after boot, or the displays glitch out.
#Amd firepro w4100 hackintosh windows#
For some reason I have to boot into Windows first and then reboot into macOS for the GPU to initialize correctly.
The FirePro W2100 does work-with a catch. I'm happy that I'm finally on the latest macOS, but there's still some things to be ironed out: