![]() ![]() Then the steps to install your new macOS Catalina VM are as follows.įirst select File New from within VMware Fusion: Install a new VM dialog You can however drag & drop the installer bundle from your VM to your host OS, or copy it out using a network share via AFP (not samba). If you want to get that 6.4GB “Install macOS 10.15 Beta.app” installer out of the VM then you cannot use the VMware Fusion shared folders feature. But as it involves a few more steps, not all of them obvious, I figured to write it out for you. As it turns out, the main trick is to start from a new VM, not upgrade an existing one. I tried that, but my VM no longer booted. Then user bogdam reported he could get passed this by changing the virtual machine hardware to Windows 10. If you then try to reboot it in verbose mode, so that you can see what happens, you’ll get the following screen. Basically if you run the upgrade then your VM will hang on reboot. This thread describes the problems you bump into if you try to upgrade a macOS Mojave VM to the new beta macOS Catalina. Credit for figuring out how-to do this goes to vmtn users Bogdam and intel008 as they are the ones who posted the resolution in the following thread at VMTN: macOS Catalina VMs do not run in VMware Fusion 11.1.0 Here’s a quick note on how-to setup a macOS catalina VM on VMware Fusion 11. Update: This is no longer an issue with Fusion 11.5
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