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nicolas_17 | 3 months ago
You also don't have "kernel access" in macOS. After boot, the memory region corresponding to the macOS kernel is marked as read-only at the memory controller level.
nicolas_17 | 3 months ago
You also don't have "kernel access" in macOS. After boot, the memory region corresponding to the macOS kernel is marked as read-only at the memory controller level.
astrange|3 months ago
Does that work for USB boot?
> You also don't have "kernel access" in macOS. After boot, the memory region corresponding to the macOS kernel is marked as read-only at the memory controller level.
You can turn that off from recovery mode. (see `bputil`) It's needed to use dtrace.