Не получается установить Mac OS ни в VB ни в VMware
Здравствуйте! У меня стоит win7 AMD-A8, пытаюсь поставить Mac OS (скачивались любые образы: от Lion до Capitan) в VirtualBox и в VMware. Были перепробованы все режимы в настройках и куча инструкций, витающих по нету.
Загрузка никогда не начиналась, ни с одним образом. моих сил уже не хватает. Помогите, откликнитесь!
VB:
с образом Маверик ничего не пошло, пишет что загрузочный носитель не найден. Хотя образ был подключен, изменен порядок загрузки. очень странно. скриншоты прилагаю.
хотелось попробовать с Лион (все-таки у народа в большинстве заработало). Пишет: во время работы виртуальной машины произошла критическая ошибка. скриншоты прилагаю.
VMware:
The CPU has been disabled by the guest operating system. Power off or reset the virtual machine.
Как все-таки поставить MAC OS? Что я неправильно делаю?
Как установить mac os на VMware
хочу поставить на виртуалку mac os 10.6 — но в описании установки надо выбрать параметр cpu для.
Не получается установить ОС помимо mac os
Доброго дня всем . пять дней назад стал обладателем Mac mini «Core i7» 2.0 (Mid-2011/Server).
Не получается установить mac os с флешки на ноутбук HP Pavilion g6-2393sr
ноутбук: HP Pavilion g6-2393sr процессор: Intel Core i5 видео карта: AMD Radeon HD 7670M .
не могу установить на Mac Pro — Mac Os X server 10.6
Всем привет. помогите пожалуйста не могу установить на Mac Pro — Mac Os X server 10.6 как.
Techyv.com
The guest operating system is not Mac OS X Server
I want to run VMware on my MAC, but I have this message which will turn off my machine. I have tried to run in many different ways, but the same error message box pops up. Is not compatible VMware with my MAC ? Should I download another version of VMware ?
The guest operating system is not Mac OS X Server.
This virtual machine will power off.
The guest operating system is not Mac OS X Server
The message in that error does not refer to your actual Mac computer but to the virtual machine you are running. If you are new to virtualization and you haven’t run a virtual machine yet before, you might be confused between a host operating system and a guest operating system. Here is the difference.
The host operating system really refers to the main or original operating system that runs and powers the computer. This is the operating system that runs when you start your CPU. The guest operating system, on the other hand, is the other operating system you install in addition to the host operating system which is, of course, through virtual machine.
In your case, if you are trying to install a program in the guest operating system and the app is expecting a Mac OS X Server OS, I think you installed the wrong operating system as guest. A Mac OS X Server is different from the usual Mac OS X operating system. You can fix the problem by uninstalling the guest operating system and installing the actual Mac OS X Server as the guest OS.
Visit Mac OS X Server for more information on how to download and or purchase it as well as if you are qualified for a free upgrade.
Question: Q: Mac OS X Snow Leopard,Lion,Mountain Lion on VMWare Fusion 7 Pro in a Mac Pro server machine having Yosemite
I have a requirement whereby I need to install Mac OS X Snow Leopard (10.6.3), Lion and Mountain Lion as VM in VMware Fusion 7 Pro which is installed in a Mac Pro server Machine having OS X Yosemite (10.10.4) as its OS.
Similar questions were asked and closed saying Apple License Agreement Violation.But now Apple have re-defined their EULA and allows OSX installations in Fusion.
However, I am facing serious issue with installation of Snow Leopard (OSX 10.6.3) in VM Fusion. On trying to install, it gives a message —
«the guest operating system is not mac os x server. this virtual machine will power off»
Note: its not OSX Snow Leopard server.
I referred the following Links —
Is there any latest official statement from Apple or VMWare (not community forums) which allows/decline 10.6.3 on Fusion. Otherwise How to do the installation.
1)Is OS X Snow Leopard allowed in Fusion 7 (need official link)
2)Lion and Mountain Lion do not have such server/client issue for fusion?
3)Whats the best way to install Lion & Mountain Lion in Fusion?
P.S. I know this is more like VMWare community question but apple community (users) might help here too.
Mac Pro, OS X Yosemite (10.10.4), install OSX 10.6.3 in VMWare Fusion
Posted on Aug 15, 2015 1:02 PM
All replies
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VMware interpreted Snow Leopard’s original end-user license to NOT allow Snow Leopard non-server Mac OS X to be run in a virtual machine. ONLY the Snow Leopard Server license explicitly allowed it to be run in a virtual machine.
So VMware Fusion knows you are not trying to run the server, and VMware is refusing to do it. It is not a technical problem, just a business decision on the part of VMware. Parallels and VirtualBox took the same position back when Snow Leopard was the current Mac OS X.
It should still be possible to get the Snow Leopard server DVD. VMware Fusion will install and run that without complaint
With the release of Lion, the end-user non-server license explicitly allowed running in a virtual machine, and so does Mountain Lion, Mavericks and Yosemite. I’ll assume El Captain does as well, but it is unreleased software at the moment.
Is there any latest official statement from Apple or VMWare (not community forums) which allows/decline 10.6.3 on Fusion.
We are NOT Apple, we are just Mac users, like yourself, so we are not in a position to give official statements. But if you consider that every commercial virtual machine software vendor refused to load non-server Snow Leopard clients, that their lawyers looked at this very closely and decided it was not worth a law suite with Apple. Again a business decision, not a technical decision.
Otherwise How to do the installation.
Since it is assumed running non-server Snow Leopard in a virtual machine is against the license, it would be a violation of the forum rules to give out instructions, if we knew them.
Aug 15, 2015 1:38 PM
FWIW, I purchased the server disc directly from Apple Store Sales (its online store’s telesales agents: 1-800-692-7753 on 8 DEC 14. If no go there, try Customer Service and Sales Support at 1-800-676-2775. It’s important to have the product name and number so you get the correct thing. AFAIK, it’s still available, even if you have to jump through many hidden hoops.
Prod Name: MAC OS X 10.6.3 SLSVR UNLCL SING LIC-INT
Prod Number: MC588Z/A
27″ i7 iMac (Mid 2011) refurb , OS X Yo (10.10.4), Mavs, ML & SL, G4 450 MP w/10.5 & 9.2.2
Aug 15, 2015 2:36 PM
OS X 10.7 and 10.8 are NOT licensed to run in a virtual machine when a different OS X version (i.e. 10.10) is the host. Virtual machines of anything after 10.6 must be run on a host Mac running the same version of OS X (10.7 may only be run on a 10.7 host, 10.8 on a 10.8 host, etc). The respective license agreements are very clear about this.
It doesn’t matter whether the virtual machine software supports 10.7 or 10.8 on a 10.10 host. The virtual machine companies are not in the business of enforcing end user license agreements between Apple and its end users. Apple has always relied on the ethics and moral character of its end users to enforce end user license agreements.
Get OS X 10.6 Server if you want to run that in a virtual machine, like baltwo says. If your Mac supports directly booting 10.7 and 10.8, you can install them on external hard drives and boot up into them when you need to. If your Mac cannot run these natively, you will need to find a used older Mac that can run them.
Aug 15, 2015 4:20 PM
VMware interpreted Snow Leopard’s original end-user license to NOT allow Snow Leopard non-server Mac OS X to be run in a virtual machine. ONLY the Snow Leopard Server license explicitly allowed it to be run in a virtual machine.
The VM companies did not consider the end user license agreement. That’s not their business. They only consider the license agreements between themselves and Apple. If the VM companies were in the business of enforcing end user license agreements, they would disallow installing 10.7, 10.8, and 10.9 virtual machines on a 10.10 host. Doing that is a violation of the respective end user license agreements, but again, the virtual machines are not in that business.
Since it is assumed running non-server Snow Leopard in a virtual machine is against the license, it would be a violation of the forum rules to give out instructions, if we knew them.
Running non-server Snow Leopard in a virtual machine is not an end user license violation. That is oft cited (and incorrect) reason speculated and given why the VM companies don’t support it. The reason they don’t support it is unknown because it has never been made public, but it’s pretty clear to me that Apple, in exchange for licensing them the boot ROM code, insisted that they do not support it. Any such agreement is between Apple and the VM companies only; we the end users are not bound by it.
So we can (and have many times) talk freely here on Apple Discussions about installing non-Server Snow Leopard into a virtual machine. But there’s little need to any more since Apple dropped the price of the fully supported Snow Leopard Server from $500 to $20. It’s just not worth the hoop jumping to trick the VM software into installing the non-server version to save $20.