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Save your BIOS settings and restart, this time booting from the USB drive. You should be greeted by the OpenCore or Clover boot menu. From there, select the option to boot from the Olarila installer (e.g., "Boot macOS Install from Olarila Catalina"). The installation process is then identical to a standard macOS installation. Once the macOS installation is complete on your hard drive, the final step is to "transfer" the working EFI folder from your USB drive to the EFI partition of your internal macOS drive. This makes your Hackintosh bootable without needing the USB drive inserted.

Use to sync your EFI folder with the latest OpenCore release and kext versions.

: The Olarila Image Forum hosts variants stretching from legacy versions like High Sierra to current macOS releases. olarila images

Whether you love them or hate them, Olarila Images have changed the way the Hackintosh community shares automation. Use them wisely, keep your backups frequent, and enjoy the world of macOS on your terms.

The Golden Rule is to choose components that have native support in macOS. Olarila's founder, , and other experts emphasize that while tools like Olarila images make the software side easier, you cannot fix fundamentally incompatible hardware with a software patch. Save your BIOS settings and restart, this time

No. The debugging time required to strip down an Olarila EFI to its essentials is often longer than just building an EFI from scratch using the Dortania guide.

Olarila provides a generic EFI that boots on many Intel systems (Haswell through to the latest, often including Skylake, Kaby Lake, Coffee Lake, and later) and many AMD systems. The installation process is then identical to a

use the original macOS installer files without deep system-level modifications. Pre-built EFI

Many older methods used heavily modified "distros" which often introduced stability problems. Olarila's commitment to a .

If you decide to use an Olarila image, follow these best practices to ensure success:

The screen flickered. Instead of the familiar Windows logo, a wall of white text scrolled rapidly against a black background—the "verbose" mode of the OpenCore bootloader .