# Which non-bootloader tools to show on the tools line, and in what
# order to display them:
-# shell - the EFI shell (requires external program; see rEFInd
-# documentation for details)
-# gptsync - the (dangerous) gptsync.efi utility (requires external
-# program; see rEFInd documentation for details)
-# about - an "about this program" option
-# exit - a tag to exit from rEFInd
-# shutdown - shuts down the computer (a bug causes this to reboot EFI
-# systems)
-# reboot - a tag to reboot the computer
-# Default is shell,about,shutdown,reboot
+# shell - the EFI shell (requires external program; see rEFInd
+# documentation for details)
+# gptsync - the (dangerous) gptsync.efi utility (requires external
+# program; see rEFInd documentation for details)
+# about - an "about this program" option
+# apple_recovery - boots the Apple Recovery HD partition, if present
+# exit - a tag to exit from rEFInd
+# shutdown - shuts down the computer (a bug causes this to reboot
+# EFI systems)
+# reboot - a tag to reboot the computer
+# Default is shell,about,apple_recovery,shutdown,reboot
#
#showtools shell, about, reboot
# controllers, etc. In most cases none are needed, but if you add
# EFI drivers and you want rEFInd to automatically load them, you
# should specify one or more paths here. rEFInd always scans the
-# "drivers" subdirectory of its own installation directory; this
-# option specifies ADDITIONAL directories to scan.
+# "drivers" and "drivers_{arch}" subdirectories of its own installation
+# directory (where "{arch}" is your architecture code); this option
+# specifies ADDITIONAL directories to scan.
# Default is to scan no additional directories for EFI drivers
#
#scan_driver_dirs EFI/tools/drivers,drivers