- #VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 MAC OS X#
- #VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 MAC OS#
- #VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 INSTALL#
The solution from did not worked for me while installing OS X 10.11 El Capitan using a dmg file.
#VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 MAC OS#
Installing VMware Tools in a Mac OS Guest Image from within the new virtual machine. To do this, first eject the Mac OS installation disc
#VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 INSTALL#
Agree to the license agreement and follow the prompts to begin the installation.Īfter the installation completes, you must install VMware Tools on the.
#VMWARE FUSION 7 COMPATIBILITY WITH 10.11 MAC OS X#
VMware Fusion must first make an Installer Image from the Install OS X Yosemite.app and install from the Image it creates. VMware Fusion 8 continues to make it easy to run the latest operating systems, and with 8.0.1 you can rest assured that not only does it run great on El Capitan, but that El Capitan also runs great as a virtual machine in VMware Fusion.It doesn't matter what type the DMG is as VMware Fusion cannot install OS X Yosemite by booting it or even booting the Install OS X Yosemite.app downloaded from Apple as that's not how it works in VMware Fusion. Users who have 8.0 installed should be getting a push notification about the available update, and we’ll be making updates to our web downloads shortly. So, we felt this was kind of a big deal, and we released a fix yesterday by way of Fusion 8.0.1 to make sure that users who want to test the latest and greatest in a virtual machine were going to have the experience they expect: It just works.
We had a fix, but it wasn’t an ideal situation and I personally am not a fan of telling users to replace components within the Fusion application package itself. Recently we were somewhat surprised by a late change to El Capitan that was preventing the installation of El Capitan in a virtual machine, which I wrote about on my personal blog over here. When we released VMware Fusion 8 and Fusion 8 Pro, we announced that we would fully support El Capitan, and we’re making good on that promise. Other folks however can tolerate the occasional bug. Folks with mission critical applications that they depend on tend to be more hesitant when risking the stability of their systems. This decision is of course going to be different for every user depending on their needs. The reviewers are generally saying the same thing: Upgrade today, it’s worth it. The community has had the time to dig into El Capitan with great reviews from Ars Technica, Macworld, Gizmodo, 9to5Mac and others. As with all major OS updates, often the question isn’t simply “Should I upgrade?”, but rather “Should I upgrade right now or wait until the first point release?”. Mac users worldwide rejoiced as Apple released the public general availability of OS X 10.11 El Capitan today.