![]() ![]() This video will show how to create the disk and start the installation process that I will describe step by step immediately after: As you can see in the following image in fact the only visible drive is the CD with the installer: To install the system we need to create an Hard Disk first. It should now start and you should see the console printing out a lot of data… wait patiently:įinally start the installation procedure selecting your language: Time to run our Virtual Machine for the first time! Click on the green “Start” arrow: We can now start the real OSX installation procedure! 1. Locate and select the iso we created in the previous chapter (“ OSXInstaller.iso“):Īt this point press “OK” and we are ready! Install OSX on the VM Click the CD icon on the right and pick the “Choose Virtual Optical Disk File…” from the menu that will pop-up: Move it to the max 128MB:Įnter then the “Storage” section and select the “Empty” disk. ![]() ![]() Select the “Display” section (subsection “Screen”) and fix the amount of Video Memory if it is something like 1MB or 8MB. Select it and click on the “Settings” button: Select then the file location (the name really) and size (I will create a 40GB HD):Īt this point the creation procedure will complete and you should be able to locate your newly created Virtual Machine: Go ahead and pick (if you want) Dynamically allocated: Select the default VDI (VirtualBox Disk Image) disk type: If you name it something like “OSX” VirtualBox will automatically select the type of Virtual Machine you want to create (“Mac OSX”):Ĭlick “Continue” and select then the memory size in the next screen. You can do this by clicking the blue icon (“new”) at the top: Creation Proceed creating a new Virtual Machine. Open now VirtualBox (you can download it there: “ “). and we’ll instruct it to mount it in a location where we will then intend to access its content.We’ll no verify the image (with the checksums): “ -noverify“.We’ll tell the system to hide the content of this disk from Finder with: “ -nobrowse“.We’ll then proceed to attach this disk image and at the same time: (So essentially in: “ /Applications/Install OS X El Capitan.app/ Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg“) Inside its content: “/ Contents/SharedSupport/InstallESD.dmg” The disk we want to attach is contained in the app you downloaded from the App Store: “ /Applications/Install OS X El Capitan.app” We achieve this using the “ hdiutil” command: “ attach“. Effectively simulating a device (the installation disk in this case) attached to our mac. It is a command used to manipulate disk images and you can find detailed about this command here:įirst thing we need to do is attaching the image of the installer (that we downloaded) as a device. We’ll make heavy use of the “ hdiutil” tool. I will put the whole list of commands at the end of this article, but I will explain every line to make it clear what’s going on. What we’ll need to do is manipulate the installer disk in order to make it ready for our Virtual Machine to understand. I wrote a dedicated post for this and you can find it here:Ĭreate Mac OS X Installer USB Disk Time to do some magic!Īs it stand the installer will not work on the Virtual Machine (and you will experience the error I mentioned at the start of the article). The very first thing to do is to download the OS X Installer. Proceed creating a new Virtual Machine.The image is ready to use in VirtualBox.Copy the System Installer to the new disk image ![]()
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