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- #Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode for mac os#
- #Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode mac os x#
- #Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode install#
- #Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode software#
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bin/rm -f /System/Library/CoreServices/ist trap "/usr/bin/touch /System/Library/CoreServices/ist exit" SIGINT SIGTERM SIGHUP sleep 999999 & wait $! IMPORTANT! There is an error (after "999999".) in the file above, which thus should correctly say:
#Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode for mac os#
Save the file, and you will reboot with that resolution as the default one the next time you boot.įull screen view works at the specified resolution, while windowed mode view is scaled down, due to the lack of Tiger-compatible VMware Tools.īTW, personally I found that NAT networking worked better than the default bridged mode (but that might also depend on your router, etc.) Sadly, there is still no sound support in Fusion for Mac OS X-based VMs. If you want a better screen resolution than the default 1024x768 one, edit the /Library » Preferences » SystemConfiguration » file with nano (see above) or TextEdit from within the Tiger VM, adding this: Graphics Mode1680x1050x32Replace with whatever resolution and color depth you want. Voilà: Tiger running in a VMware Fusion VM, where everything works as usual - except, sadly, for the VMware Tools, which don't (yet?) work in Tiger (so there's no point in installing them).
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#Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode mac os x#
Open VMware Fusion and then start the Mac OS X VM in the Virtual Machine Library: everything should be OK, as in an ordinary VM, and you will boot into a virtualized Mac OS X Tiger, where you can do the usual things.Finally, unmount the VM disk from the Finder. Then use the usual Control-O, Enter, and Control-X to save the file. bin/bash-c/bin/rm -f /System/Library/CoreServices/ist trap "/usr/bin/touch /System/Library/CoreServices/ist exit" SIGINT SIGTERM SIGHUP sleep 999999 & wait $!KeepAliveRunAtLoadThis will automate the creation and deletion of the ist file, so Fusion thinks that the OS is server before booting it, while OS X thinks that it correctly is the client once booted. Open the Terminal and issue the command:.
#Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode install#
Once the install is complete (no reboot needed), exit the installer.In the Mac OS X installer, select the mounted VM disk as the target, and then install Tiger as usual: now, as you install from within your specific machine, the installer won't complain, even if you select a virtual disk image as the target disk (and not, for example, your internal HD).Insert your Tiger/Intel DVD and navigate to /System » Installation » Packages » OSInstall.mpkg, then double-click it to open the Mac OS X installer.Control-click on the package, then choose More » Mount Virtual Disk from the pop-up menu, thus mounting the pre-formatted (with HFS+ Journaled) VM disk on the Desktop. Navigate to the VM package's position (by default located in ~/Documents » Virtual Machines, unless you have changed it).Create a new Mac OS X 10.5 Server 64-bit (the default setting) virtual Machine (VM) in VMware Fusion don't start it, then quit Fusion.Now, assuming you have a machine-specific Mac OS X 10.4.x Tiger DVD for Intel, and want to try to run this operating system as a virtual machine through VMware Fusion 2.x, on the same computer upgraded to Leopard? Well, let's try to do this in an as simple way as possibile, from within Mac OS X 10.5.x Leopard. So, Apple, it would really be a great thing to permit virtualization of *all* your Intel-compatible OSes, both server and client, starting from Tiger and upwards.
#Mac os 10.4.11 target disk mode software#
So, why would one hypothetically want to do all this? Well, it could be very good for running legacy, up-to-Tiger-only programs (see, for example, Photoshop 7, which won't run on Leopard etc.) and/or for testing software in a Tiger/Intel environment, without being forced to have a partition dedicated to Tiger. So, let's take it only as an - I hope interesting - exercise to understand things a little better. First of all, this hint (which is based on some very good previous hints appearing here) is only of academic interest, almost as a proof of concept, for now (at least until Apple will change their licensing terms).