![]() ![]() In previous versions, EFI is only enabled for virt machines. By default new VMs created for pc, q35, and virt machines will have EFI enabled. GPU acceleration is still an experimental feature, so it may not work in some situations (including many 3D use cases). Note that newly created VMs will default to a "GPU Supported" display device on supported architectures but existing VMs must manually change the display device in Display settings. Windows is not supported because there is currently no virtio-gpu driver for Windows that supports 3D acceleration. Use `virtio-ramfb-gl` or `virtio-vga-gl` display device and compatible Linux drivers (most modern Linux distros will have it already installed). (macOS 11 and iOS 13 ) GPU acceleration for OpenGL on Linux.You can configure it in the Network settings for your VM. (macOS 11.3 Only) Bridged networking and shared networking support.Create, manage, run VMs directly from your device.Frontend designed from scratch for macOS 11 and iOS 11 using the latest and greatest APIs.30 processors supported including x86_64, ARM64, and RISC-V.Full system emulation (MMU, devices, etc) using QEMU.For developers and enthusiasts, there are dozens of other emulated processors as well including: ARM32, MIPS, PPC, and RISC-V. In addition, lower performance emulation is available to run x86/圆4 on Apple Silicon as well as ARM64 on Intel. On Intel Macs, x86/圆4 operating system can be virtualized. ![]() UTM employs Apple's Hypervisor virtualization framework to run ARM64 operating systems on Apple Silicon at near native speeds. In short, it allows you to run Windows, Linux, and more on your Mac, iPhone, and iPad drive "if=none,media=disk,id=drive3,file=./Snow Leopard Server-0.UTM is a full featured system emulator and virtual machine host for iOS and macOS. device "ide-hd,bus=ide.0,drive=drive3,bootindex=1,model=Snow Leopard Server-0,ver=F.A5JNMR,serial=XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX" \ device ich9-usb-uhci3,masterbus=usb-controller-0.0,firstport=4,multifunction=on \ device ich9-usb-uhci2,masterbus=usb-controller-0.0,firstport=2,multifunction=on \ device ich9-usb-uhci1,masterbus=usb-controller-0.0,firstport=0,multifunction=on \ device ich9-usb-ehci1,id=usb-controller-0 \ smp cpus=2,sockets=1,cores=2,threads=1 \ (I can even shut down the VM with my keyboard’s power button …)īy the way: At there are new installers available for Lion and Mountain Lion. I changed the network card to the e1000-82545em submodel to reflect the vendor and device ID my activated software expects. Same with some stuff in the QEMU startup command file (the hard disk attributes “Model”, “Revision”, and “Serial” can’t be added to UTM, so I had to use QEMU directly). I populated the “Platform Info” fields of OpenCore’s ist with the details gathered from the old VM. Snow Leopard (Server) doesn’t run on UTM/QEMU yet, so I updated the VM to Mountain Lion. ’Cause changing that (or a bunch of other parameters of the VM’s system) triggered the registration dialog of a certain application that tied its activation to those hardware parameters when I installed it years ago. After moving it to the new one with SSD just a few years ago I had to run the host with UnSolid.kext injected to prevent Parallels from prepending “APPLE SSD” to the model name of the VM’s virtual hard disk. Originally it was a Snow Leopard Server VM on Parallels that I created on my old Hackintosh with HDD years ago. Thanks for your hard work and for uploading them! I created a Mountain Lion VM in QEMU (on Intel macOS Ventura host) based on your config. ![]() If anyone wants the UTM config files I'm successfully using, let me know and I'll post them on my GitHub page. ![]()
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