One would use coreboot + Tianocore + OpenCore. Whether a particular board has the required hardware support, or whether coreboot provides the firmware structures MacOS requires is another story (and yes, I know part of that is what OpenCore works around).
FWIW I know of a few users with Acer c720 and Dell 13 7310 Chromebooks running MacOS on my current coreboot 4.12/Tianocore-based firmware using OpenCore On Mon, Jun 8, 2020 at 10:31 AM Evgeny Zinoviev via coreboot <[email protected]> wrote: > > coreboot doesn't boot the OS, it performs hardware initialization and passes > control to a payload (SeaBIOS, GRUB, Tianocore, etc. - these are payloads). > So you would have to use something like clover anyway. > > On 6/8/20 6:22 PM, lol wrote: > > Hi, I wanted to ask if coreboot is capable of booting macOS. There are > bootloaders like clover and opencore that does the job but does coreboot do > this thing with more efficiency? > > _______________________________________________ > coreboot mailing list -- [email protected] > To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] > > _______________________________________________ > coreboot mailing list -- [email protected] > To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] _______________________________________________ coreboot mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]

