Your DVD must, of course, be called « Mac OS X Install DVD », which is a priori true. Once the image is on the Finder, you must type a line command. Hdiutil convert ~/Desktop/osx-installer.iso UDRW -format -o ~/Desktop/osx-install Once the image is on the disk – it can take a long time – you have to convert it into a DMG image with the following command. By default, the image is placed on the desktop.ĭd if = /dev/disk1 of=~/Desktop/osx-installer.iso bs=1m « /Dev/disk1 » is the name of your optical drive, obtained with the command « diskutil list ». The first thing to do, therefore, is to obtain a correct image, using the line command and the Terminal. In fact, the disk utility does not copy the EFI partition, which is indispensable here. We’ll have to go through a slightly different method. It also works with Tiger, even if it’s more complicated to find a DVD with a x86 system, as Apple never retailed any.Ī thing to know is that trying to make a disk image with the disk utility is useless : it will not work. If it is a grey version provided with a machine, you will first have to modify it so that it could be installed on any Mac.
So this tip is clearly in opposition to the Mac OS X license : it consists in modifying a classic version of Mac OS X to make the virtualization software believe it is a server version.įirst thing to do, find a DVD of Mac OS X 10.5 or 10.6 and make an picture. The MacOS X license does not allow to virtualize the customer versions of the system, even if sometimes the developers ignore it, as with version 4.1 of VMWare Fusion … But as it is perfectly legal to virtualize Mac OS X versions in its dedicated server, it is possible to override the limitation. Today, I will show you a trick that will help you to virtualize easily Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) or 10.6 (Snow Leopard) with VMWare Fusion 4.11 (the latest).