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Check destination folder. This is your file for installation in VirtualBox. There should be a.iso file extension. Installation in VirtualBox. Open VirtualBox. Click 'new' Type the name for virtual machine and Mac OS X for type. Choose your version (if you have Mojave or Catalina, choose Mac OS X (64 bit)). Select memory size. Converting an iso to vdi is different from simply booting VirtualBox from an iso, instead it is taking an.iso image, for example of a live boot image, and then converting that itself to a.vdi VirtualBox virtual disk image. This is useful for many reasons, whether to customize that image file, or for administration or testing purposes. Type (Mac OS X). Version (Mac OS X 64-bit). Memory 4 GB (recommended 8 GB or higher). Hard Disk: Select Use an existing virtual machine hard disk file. Click on the Folder icon to browse the macOS Catalina VMDK file. Click Add and select the Catalina VMDK image. Download macOS 11 Big Sur ISO DMG VMDK VirtualBox Images. Download macOS 11 Big Sur ISO DMG VMDK VirtualBox Images. Hi Friend Today I Am Sharing Latest Apple Release macOS 11 Big Sur Iso Dmg Vmdk Virtualbox Images for Download It Is the Biggest Update Comes from Apple It Is the Latest Version of MacOS Operating System Series Called Marcos 11 Big Sur Apple Also Release Ios 14 for Ipad Os Watch. By default, each virtual machine has a directory on your host computer where all the files of that machine are stored: the XML settings file, with a.vbox file extension, and its disk images. This is called the machine folder. By default, this machine folder is located in a common folder called VirtualBox VMs, which Oracle VM VirtualBox creates in the current system user's home directory.
I'm trying to install macOS Mojave on virtual box. My host is MacOS High Sierra.1) I started from the Mojave Installer, downloaded from Applestore.
2) I have built an installation ISO file ( I have created the dmg with hdutil, then I have mounted it with hdiutil attach, then I have sudo createinstallmedia... at the and I have the .iso)
3) I have created a virtual box, with a 35G hard drive .vdi and also an optical disk, on controller SATA. On this optical disk I have connected my .iso image of the installer.
4) I have set the virtual box memory to 4G, disk memory to 128, removed the floppy, set 2 processors. I have also loaded the virtual box extended pack. I set USB3 in the ports, otherwise the mouse and keyboard were not working). Now mouse and keyboards are working
5) I have started the virtual box. I enter in a screen where I can select install or disk utility
6) I selected disk utility and I select EDIT/NEW on the virtual box disk. I use HFS+, but I tried also with APSF. No difference.
7) After disk utility I start the installation on the new disk, that now is properly recognized.
8) At the end of the process the system reboots but instead of proceeding it goes back to the same window for selection of disk util or installation. This means that it has rebooted from the same cdrom image and not from the hard disk.
9) I select Restart from the apple menu and I intercept the restart by Fn F12. In this way I enter a screen where I select the Boot Manteinance Manager.
10) On this page I select BootFromFile, and then select files down to the boot.efi.
11) I do continue
12) The second part of macOS installation now proceeds. It is longer than the 1st part but everything seems to go ahead properly.
13) At the end of this second part the system reboots but still the reboot is done on the CDROM. Here is the problem. I were expecting having a reboot from the new macOS installed on the hard disk. But instead it seems that the hard disk is no bootable.
14) Even if I remove the cdrom from the virtual box setting, I cannot boot. In this case, as there is no more boot disk ( the virtualbox hard disk is not recognized as a boot drive) it starts the EFI shell.
15) I exit from the EFI shell and I enter the boot manager, but now there is no .efi file to boot from.
16) If I set back the image of the cdrom and open the disk utilities, doing get_info on the hard disk I see that the hard disk is not set as bootable.
17) I tried also to select the hard disk as a starting disk, keeping both the cdrom image and the hard disk. At the startup it logs Boot Failed MACOS X, and then goes ahead with the boot from the CDROM.
In summary:
I think to have done all the proper steps.
I had the installation of the macOS both in phase1 and phase 2
At the end, anyway I end up by having a virtual hard disk that is not considered as bootable.
Everything is coherent to confirm this.
But basically I think to have done the proper installation.
Download Mac Os Iso Image
Here I am stuck. No more ideas.Download Mac Os Image For Virtualbox
All the discussions I have found are focused on the preparation of the ISO installer and on the phase 2 of the installation.On the other hand in my case the problem is AFTER the phase2 of the installation.