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I have a Mac Pro with 2 SSD (One with Yosemite, one with Mavericks). I need a Applescript to change the Boot-Volume from one SSD to the other and to deactivate or activate the NVIDIA-Driver. I found a similar script for the change of Boot-Volume:

do shell script "bless --mount /Volumes/NAME_of_the_SSD/ --setBoot --legacy" with administrator privileges
tell application "System Events" to shut down

So as a total noob in scripting Im not shure if the path is right (Volumes/Name_of_the_SSD/)

Additional I must activate/deactivate the NVIDIA-Driver, but I think this should do it:

do shell script "sudo nvram boot-args="nv_disable=1"" password "xxxxxx" with administrator privileges

or

do shell script "sudo nvram boot-args="nvda_drv=1"" password "xxxxxx" with administrator privileges
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  • This may not be the comment you're looking for, but won't you save a lot of time if you used a VM? Oct 13, 2015 at 14:49
  • What do you mean with the VM? Oct 13, 2015 at 14:58
  • Do you mean to install Windows? Or a VM in Yosemite with Mavericks in it? To clearify some things here, I am a total noob in scripting! And obvious in VM too. Oct 13, 2015 at 15:09
  • I think the suggestion is that you maybe consider installing Oracle VirtualBox (which is free) on your Mac and then install Windows 7 (or any other junk you want to play around with) inside the Virtual Machine. That way you can keep your Mac booted in Yosemite or Mavericks or whatever decent, Apple-OS you want, but have a separate window that runs Windows AT THE SAME TIME without rebooting. Oct 13, 2015 at 15:23
  • Maybe the first post was a little confusing, i dont need or want Windows involved. I just need the script, cause I am lazy. Normally, If i want to boot from Yosemite to Mavericks, I have to disable the NVIDIA-Driver in the Terminal, choose the Startup-Volume with Mavericks and reboot. So I want a script of this precedure, thats it. Oct 13, 2015 at 15:31

1 Answer 1

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Found the solution:

do shell script "sudo systemsetup -setstartupdisk /Volumes/Name_of_the_SSD" password "xxxxxxx" with administrator privileges
do shell script "sudo nvram boot-args=\"nv_disable=1\"" password "xxxxxxx" with administrator privileges
tell application "System Events" to restart

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