I tried 4 CPUs but that stressed my machine a 'little' with the fans running hot so I've dropped back to 2 for nowĬ) Well done with the -cpu-profile that made it work. One that seemed to be stressed was increasing the display memory to the max (128).
Nov 2017, 06:25 Location: Colorado Primary OS: Mac OS X other VBox Version: OSE other Guest OSses: macOS High had tried a few things with various results so when I started to see the Recovery Partition window in the VM with the choice of Installing the System I went down the rabbit hole.ī) I picked up some of the potential template increases from somewhere in my travels, maybe another thread on this forum even. IOConsoleUsers: gIOScreenLockState 3, hs 0, bs 0, now 0, sm 0x0 dbourne Posts: 8 Joined: 25. you switch to the graphics with the Apple logo and the progress bar, you'll get stuck at the point where the OSX ≥ 10.12.4 gets stuck: It may seem that the installation stalls but don't shut the VM, be patient. VBoxManage modifyvm "High Sierra" -cpu-profile "Intel Core i7-6700K"ī) Start the VM. [Quit VirtualBox and issue the command (iMac 27" 2017)
Choose the newly created ISO as your boot medium. Accept the defaults, with the exception of RAM If you are a Standard user, first do a "su Administrator" before running the script.Ī) Create a new VM with the 10.13 template. You have to be an Administrator in order for the "sudo" to work, since Standard users cannot sudo. NOTE: The script will not work if you are a Standard user. By default it will be placed in the "/Applications" folder.
My changes/suggestions in Ī) Download "Install macOS High Sierra.app" from Apple.
I've adjusted your instructions slightly to highlight the bits I got lost on. Open Disk Utilities means open Disk Utilities in the Guest VM That will you get to the EFI menu, shown worked!!! After multiple tries with different results I didn't recognize a key instruction. If you don't succeed, and you end up in the EFI shell, enter " exit". You need to keep resetting the VM (HostKey+R) and press any key until you get into the EFI menu screen.Once you find yourself up and running, right after the language selection step, shut down the VM and eject the 10.13 ISO that you booted from. Apple (another wise move) has modified the way that it reads/treats the different partitions in the EFI, something that currently VirtualBox cannot handle (as of 5.2.2).But, you won't re-boot into the OSX installation phase, you'll restart the whole installation again from scratch! Houston, we have a problem!!! If you're observant, you'll notice a quick message coming up, right before the VM boots again from the ISO to restart the whole installation process: That part is rather quick, lasting less than a couple of minutes on an SSD drive. This will start a phase where the actual installer is copied to the Recovery Partition of the hard disk that you selected. Now the hard disk shows properly when Disk Utility is opened. NOTE: This "glitch" has been fixed with 10.13.2. Leave the defaults (HFS+J/GUID), except maybe the name, choose anything you like. Select it and choose " Erase" from the toolbar. Now you'll see your " VBOX HARDDISK Medium". On the top-left side, click on the " View" drop-down and select " Show All Devices". For reasons that only Apple engineers understand, you will *not* see your hard drive! Instead you'll see a bunch of partitions that are of no interest to you whatsoever (see NOTE below). After selecting the language, open " Disk Utility".IOConsoleUsers: gIOScreenLockState 3, hs 0, bs 0, now 0, sm 0x0 Specifically, right before you switch to the graphics with the Apple logo and the progress bar, you'll get stuck at the point where the OSX ≥ 10.12.4 gets stuck: The installation WILL fail if you do that, because the OSX installer will convert the filesystem to APFS, something that the VirtualBox EFI can not handle. NOTE: Do NOT designate your virtual HD as an " SSD". Also make sure that USB3 controller is selected under the Ports » USB. Accept the defaults, with the exception of RAM (at least 3 GB), number of vCPUs (at least 2) and amount of HD (according to your needs, no less than 10 GB). Create a new VM with the 10.13 template.
NOTE: The instructions to create an ISO from any OSX Install application are covered in another article.