
- #Vmware darwin.iso mavericks mac os x#
- #Vmware darwin.iso mavericks install#
- #Vmware darwin.iso mavericks driver#
However, it doesn’t have to be an exact match, since in this tutorial, instead of altering one or two lines of the resulting VMX file as we did in the Leopard tutorial, we’ll be replacing the contents of the entire file as well. The interface has changed a bit in VMware Workstation 7, so some screen shots will not be exact.
#Vmware darwin.iso mavericks mac os x#
You should use the same settings as those documented in Mac OS X 10.5.6 under VMware 6.5.2. In VMware Workstation 7, create a new virtual machine.

Once the new “darwin.iso” is in place, you may proceed with the install. However, before you actually perform the install, you need to copy the “darwin.iso” file you extracted from darwin-wks7.zip into the “vmware-darwin-200/” folder, replacing the file with the same name that is already there. Although instructions for installing this are included with the archive, it simply takes a “ setup.cmd install” from within the extracted folder to complete. This distribution will need to be installed into your VMware Workstation 7 directory. This will create a folder called “vmware-darwin-200/” that contains all the archive’s files.

#Vmware darwin.iso mavericks driver#
I give particular credit to Talyn’s post in that forum for giving me the clue to use the ISO image instead of the DMG, and for the Ensoniq audio driver link. I did some cherry picking of steps from a number of places (most notably, the Insanely Mac forums). I actually did very little experimentation/exploration this time.
#Vmware darwin.iso mavericks install#
In fact, in this version (I’m using 7.0.0 build-203739), you can install VMware Tools yourself, and enable sound! Workstation 7 appears to have greatly improved support for the Mac operating systems to the point that installing Snow Leopard into a virtual machine is much easier than it was with Mac OS X 10.5.6 under VMware 6.5.2. Snow Leopard) into a VMware Workstation 7 virtual machine. You know how things get easier with practice? Well, there wasn’t much required for this feat: Installing Mac OS X 10.6 (a.k.a.
