

A large portion of it is going to be related to Mac OS X and Hackintoshes, but you can ignore all of this.ĬTRL-F to find something called "GUI", under that, to add things to the Clover boot screen, you're going to want to add entries similar to this: GUI You can save the file by saving it to the desktop, deleting the file in the EFI partition (I suggest making a backup by doing the same thing- open it in Wordpad or something, and save the unedited copy to the desktop or something) and copying the edited file by right clicking, clicking copy, and right clicking and clicking paste in the EFI partition. To access the ist file, you want to head to EFI/EFI/CLOVER/ist - right click the file in Task Manager, and select whatever rich text editor you use. To access the drive in Task Manager, click Run new task, and in the window that pops up, in the bottom right click Browse.

You won't be able to access this drive through explorer- instead, you need to do it through Task Manager.

Now, you should see an EFI drive in Windows. The title is usually "Unknown", but if you see none of this, you probably chose the wrong drive.)Īssign letter=s (or whatever drive letter you want, as long as it isn't already occupied) exit Select partition x (x for the clover partition- for me, the clover partition was 200MB. Select disk # (where # is the disk number of the disk with Clover) list partition

List disk (If you have more than one disk, take note of which one you installed the Clover EFI onto.) You can mount the clover EFI partition in Windows by doing the following: Generally clover is used only for OS X, since well, as far as I'm aware it was created specifically with Hackintoshes in mind. All Clover Configurator does is mount the EFI partition, and give user-friendly way of editing the ist (an OS X properties list file) located in clover.
