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Run osx on vmware player
Run osx on vmware player







  1. Run osx on vmware player mac os#
  2. Run osx on vmware player license#
  3. Run osx on vmware player windows#

Run osx on vmware player windows#

Like Windows there is no paravirtualization really with macOS, so for these solutions you need a modern CPU including hardware virtualization/IOMMU support. With PCIe passthrough macOS can run very well virtualized under a hypervisor or even just under Linux directly in something like QEMU (there are lots of people playing with this though some of it is more experimental then others, see for example OSX-KVM and it's sub UEFI work). Sorry but it's not a dumb idea, even if like any hack it's some effort to set up (though can be a lot less effort to maintain). Someone tell me how dumb an idea this is, please I can't comment on GPU performance, as I haven't had a machine with a discrete GPU in over 15 years.

Run osx on vmware player mac os#

Plus I get an actual *nix environment, not a Mac OS environment with *nix tools that are years out of date. I actually prefer it to my actual, real-life Mac (a 2017 MBP 13"), because even with a VM and a Linux host running simulatenously, and both being pushed hard, I still get better battery life on my Dell. I'd heartily recommend it for iOS development. You'll need to edit a couple VirtualBox config files (simple to do, just a couple of plain text files that you add a couple lines to) to enable Mac support on non-Mac hardware. Stuff like iMessages and Continuity won't work properly. Updates to Mac OS can break things, but they are easy to fix again, and unlike a Hackintosh, you have snapshots to rollback to in case you've borken something. I could use VMWare Player but then I miss snapshot support.

run osx on vmware player

Run osx on vmware player license#

I don't have a VMWare license any more, so I use VirtualBox nowawadays. It works beautifully on both VirtualBox and VMWare. I've done it on Thinkpads, and I'm doing it currently on my Dell Latitude 7280. I'm sure Google will tell you if you ask it nicely. I was just playing with it so I never tried logging in with an Apple ID or anything more complicated (like enabling 3d acceleration in the VM and seeing what performance would be like for graphical applications), so no idea how all that works. Performance was perfectly decent for non-graphical apps. The Mac Store appeared to work fine, as did installation of MacOS updates. I was curious so tested this for a laugh. Then you just have to obtain an appropriate VM image (also easily found via Google) or build your own.

run osx on vmware player

Once you have VMware Player installed and patched appropriately, you will find MacOS suddenly appears as a valid client OS option. I assume the same is possible with Player for Linux, but didn't actually look for that myself.

run osx on vmware player

If you hunt around on internet you can find a way to revise VMware Player for Windows (free) to also support MacOS as a valid client OS. VMware supports MacOS as a valid client OS within Fusion. I read up on this at one point last year.









Run osx on vmware player