my virtual machine can't find an option for mac OS 64 bit, i'm trying to run a leopard on it but I can't find a section for the 64 bit mac.
I had the same problem and I solved it by:
1. reinstalling/repaire the latest version of VirtualBox.
2. restarting the computer.
Try using "Oracle VirtualBox" which is an open source virtualization tool and iATKOS ML2 (Mountain Lion 10.8.2 PC) which is a simple and all-in-one OSX86 installation for basic and compatible hardware.
Visit http://iatkos.me/forum/viewtopic.php?f=77&t=23105 for further details.
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I have install VMWARE (virtual Machine) on Windows 7. And have installed Mac OS Leopard 10.5.5 image on that Virtual Machine.
Now i want to install Xcode 5.1.1 on that Mac os, but it gives above Error. Please help me how and which version to install on that Mac OS Leopard 10.5.5.
Xcode 5.1 requires OS X 10.8 or 10.9. Xcode 3.1.4 is the latest version that runs on Leopard.
When i was programming with xcode with vmware i didn`t managed to download it from the store and make it run in vmware, what i did is i downloaded a Mac OS with preinstalled xcode in it.
Also see the vmware options!
I want to test my cocoa application on mac os 10.6 (Snow Leoprrd) . But there are 10.7.5 is installed on my system . How can we install mac os 10.6 on my system , i have downloaded .dmg file of mac os 10.6 , I have use VMWare but there is no luck error occures that "This os is not mac os x server'. Is there any way to install this os virtually or directly on any system of mac os .
Thanks
If you have an external hard drive you can install the OS to that drive and boot up directly from there to test out your software. This works great and allows you to run the OS in a full native environment instead of using a VM.
Alternatively you could still go the VM route, but keep in mind that it might be trial and error. This article has a step-by-step guide to install Snow Leopard with VMWare:
http://macs.about.com/od/windowsonyourmac/ss/Virtualization-Of-Leopard-And-Snow-Leopard-Using-Vmware-Fusion.htm
I upgraded my OSX to Lion. As I went to install couchdb locally I found that the installer link for mac on http://couchdb.apache.org was gone and replaced with "Mac OS X binaries coming soon". I haven't used couchdb before but I know it was there at one point.
A friend sent me a copy zipped up which he installed on his Snow Leopard OSX. This installed and I could access the Admin Console, but I was unable to access futon.
Is there a reason the button is missing, or is there another way to install it?
My guess is that the site is detecting my operating system and they just aren't ready for 10.7.5 yet. But How do I go about installing a local version?
To install I followed the steps in this post Couch DB installation not working on Mac OSx Lion.
It worked like a charm step by step.
The new version 1.2.1 has recently been released and packed for Mac OSX. You can download it from http://couchdb.apache.org/#download or from http://www.apache.org/dyn/closer.cgi?path=/couchdb/packages/mac/1.2.1/Apache-CouchDB-1.2.1.zip
I have a mac os x installer and its version is 23.1. So I want to know the system version of OS X after I install it because I want to install 10.6.3 on my machine. Any ideas?
Mount the installation medium, then navigate to System/Library/CoreServices on the image/DVD (in a Terminal window). You'll find a SystemVersion.plist file there that contains the build number and version of the OS.
This will likely be build 10A432 (10.6); as far as I know, Apple doesn't distribute standalone installers for point updates. If you're in the Mac Developer Program, you can download a delta update to 10.6.3 from connect.apple.com.
I am trying to install Mac OSX on Windows XP using virtualbox and keep getting this message: BSD root: disk1s3, major 14, minor 3. I have assigned an 80gb virtual hard drive and have tried other iso files, but get the same message.
Technically installing MAC OSX on a virtual machine is against the EULA. That being said it's not a trivial operation to get OSX running on a VM. You might want to check out The OSX86 Project