

- #VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC UPDATE#
- #VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC PRO#
- #VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC ISO#
- #VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC DOWNLOAD#
This will make sure that the VM does not automatically boot when it’s fully created.
#VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC ISO#
iso instead of selecting the original installer:ĭo NOT click ‘Finish’, click ‘Customize Settings’ instead and save the VM where you want.

Mv ~/Desktop/BigSur.cdr ~/Desktop/BigSur.iso Hdiutil convert /tmp/BigSur.dmg -format UDTO -o ~/Desktop/BigSur.cdr

=> Or force eject the mounted installer volume in Finder (Thanks Kevin for reminding me about the -force option) Sudo hdiutil detach /Volumes/Install\ macOS\ Big\ Sur -force Sudo /Applications/Install\ macOS\ Big\ Sur.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia -volume /Volumes/BigSur -nointeraction Hdiutil attach /tmp/BigSur.dmg -noverify -mountpoint /Volumes/BigSur To work around this I had to create an ISO file from the installer and use that to create the VM in Fusion 12: hdiutil create -o /tmp/BigSur -size 17000m -volname BigSur -layout SPUD -fs HFS+J I’ve ran into this issue in the past, where are reboot of the host Mac fixed it, but not this time. Except one glitch which I think VMWare is aware of: Fusion 12 fails to create the installation medium when you select the macOS Big Sur Installer: I basically followed the exact same workflow as my earlier post on VM’s and Automated Enrolment, which all seems to work fine. That said, I still wanted to test the creation of a Big Sur VM, and to do so I started with VMWare Fusion 12. As general advise I’d always crosscheck your testing on a physical machine before putting anything into production, especially when you see some weird behaviour.
#VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC PRO#
Inconsistent behaviour with Setup Assistant showing or hiding screens you select in the Jamf Pro pre-stage.Even on a high end Macbook Pro it feels a bit slow, but more problematic is the inconsistent behaviour I see from time to time. The VMware Fusion Tech Preview can be downloaded from the VMware website.Since the release of macOS Catalina I have mixed feelings about using a VM to test macOS deployments. While in the testing period, VMware Fusion will be free to use. VMware says that it is looking for feedback from users in order to iron out kinks and add new capabilities in preparation for more formal support later this year. Ubuntu 20.04.4 and 22.04 for arm64 are not currently booting (Ubuntu 20.04.4 builds from July 5 and onward) We are working to resolve this.macOS virtual machines are out of scope for this release, but it's something we're looking into.Fusion will not support running VMs across different architectures.At the current time, Fusion on Apple silicon devices is "still a work in progress" and there are some limitations to be aware of. While the new functionality was designed with Windows 11 in mind, VMware says the tools can be used with other VMs too. 3D Graphics HW Acceleration and OpenGL 4.3 in Linux VMs* (Requires Linux 5.19+ & Mesa 22.1.3+).VMtools installation for Windows 11 GOS on M1.

#VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC DOWNLOAD#
Available as a free tech preview, the 2H22 version of Fusion will finally allow Apple silicon Mac users to download and use Windows on their machines through virtualization.įeatures include Windows 11 support with 2D GFX and networking, VMtools installation for Windows on Apple silicon machines, improved Linux support on Apple silicon machines, and more.
#VMWARE FUSION M1 MAC UPDATE#
VMware this week announced that its latest VMware Fusion update brings Windows 11 support to both Intel and Apple silicon Macs.
