You can follow our blog for new images we release for VirtualBox.
It is a free and powerful x86 and AMD64/Intel64 virtualization product available for most of the operating systems such as Linux, Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Solaris and ported version for FreeBSD.
VirtualBox is the most easiest way to run secondary OS on your primary operating system, If your hardware doesn’t allow you to install any other operating system then VirtualBox comes in hand. We do not install ‘Guest Additions’ in the OS or add any kind of stuff, read our privacy policy.
Here you can follow the guide how to attach/configure VDI image with VirtualBox. You can check FAQs for Credentials( Username & Password) for VDI images. At the moment we have plans to offer you 30+ Linux/Unix distributions, we may add more to our list in near future, you can also send us suggestions if we are missing any popular distribution from our list.
We offer images for both architectures 32bit and 64bit, you can download for free for both architectures. From here you can download and attach the VDI image to your VirtualBox and use it. You can do all of this using the following command.We offer open-source (Linux/Unix) virtual machines (VDIs) for VirtualBox, we install and make them ready-to-use VirtualBox images for you. Also, in order to simplify things, you can rename the folder to macOS. Once you have created the folder, you can move the unzipped folder containing your macOS installation tools and scripts to the KVM folder. To easily manage your virtual machines, you can create a folder named KVM that will contain the macOS virtual machine. You can use this directory to host other virtual machines on your system. Creating a KVM Folder for Your Virtual Machines The unzip tool will save the extracted command folder as macOS-Simple-KVM-master. Use the unzip command-line utility to extract the contents of the package. The downloaded packages will be saved as master.zip in the /Downloads folder. Then download the project using the wget utility: wget Switch to the /Downloads folder to make it the current working directory. This guide uses the foxlet project on GitHub to ease out the installation process of macOS and management of the virtual machine with QEMU/KVM.įirst, you'll have to download the macOS base image and installation tools from foxlets' official GitHub repository. Running virtual machines will provide you so with many other benefits as well.Īfter you have finished testing a QEMU/KVM virtual machine and no longer need it, you can easily delete the virtual disk file associated with the virtual machine.ĭownloading macOS and the Installation Tools You can also use a GUI interface with QEMU/KVM, and the preferred GUI manager of choice is virt-manager. 3- Click on the new button on the top of VirtualBox. 2- Oracle VM VirtualBox Manager will start. Also, creating virtual machines from the command line has never been simpler with QEMU. 1- Double click the VirtualBox Icon under applications in the Finder Window on your Mac OS. The major advantage of QEMU is that it is very easy to set up and manage. Users often use QEMU alongside KVM as it provides a natively implemented virtual machine on the Linux kernel. QEMU is a virtual machine emulator and virtualizer which is quite similar to VMware and VirtualBox on Windows. With that, you will be able to use native macOS software that is not otherwise available in Linux. This guide will show you how to install macOS on Ubuntu Linux using a QEMU-KVM Virtual Machine. Besides, you can rest assured that if something goes wrong with the virtual machine, it won't break your existing host operating system. Use the drop-down menu next to 'Type' to select 'MacOS X.' Use the drop-down menu next to 'Version' to select 'MacOS X (64-bit).' Click Next. Click the arrow pointing down next to 'Machine Folder' and select a folder to install the virtual machine. They primarily allow us to test and use different operating systems without the need for extra hardware. Click New below the gear icon at the top. Virtual machines are very important in computing and software engineering.