![]() The other previously-broken OSes had USB bus issues - 10.0-10.1 used CUDA and UTM was trying to insert USB instead causing the ADB handlers to be disconnected, and macOS 11 was seeing the presented USB bus and rejecting it, leaving the user with no input devices. There were no changes in QEMU between 3.0.4 and 3.1, so this is likely a SPICE or UTM issue with 9.0.4. There's been some sort of regression with 9.0.4, and 10.4.x through 10.6.x i386 and x86_64 still aren't booting. Good news is, UTM is now happily running Mac OS 9.1 through 10.5.x PPC, 10.7.x through 11.x x86_64 and 12.x AARCH. DSDTs don't seem to be the problem, and I've played around with a number of OpenCore kernel options and they haven't made a difference either. Latest 3.1b build of UTM fixes a bunch of things that bring this closer to booting, but still no luck getting past that first hang using Penryn CPU and either OpenCore i386 or OpenCore x86_64. worth noting, that YouTube link in the comments is a known fake - it says it's Snow Leopard, but really they're running Leopard PPC (which works just fine I've got 9.0.4 through 10.5.6 PPC working fine in UTM, which uses the qemu-system-ppc-screamer fork instead of stable qemu-system-ppc, which enables audio but breaks snapshots). This doesn't fully answer the question, but it answers it up to a point where maybe someone can find the last few missing pieces. Next step is to try via M1 homebrew qemu, and see if rolling the config by hand without SPICE etc. Build failure during install sqlite3 on Mac OS X 10.6 using. Python 3.1.1 on Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. There are words to describe such configuration, but none of them are flattering. Copy it over to my M1, try to boot it via UTM, and. So yes, it looks like both Digia and Riverbank hard coded the use of OS X 10.8 in the current releases. I've got UTM config files on there for all other OS Versions (10.7 through 10.15).įor 10.6, I'm stuck during boot no matter whether I use Chameleon, iBoot, OpenCore i386 or OpenCore x86_64, I end up frozen at a grey-on-grey apple boot screen, with verbose mode not showing up even when I've explicitly set it, either in the boot plist or in the QEMU parameters.īut it should definitely be possible the wrong hardware is being presented and/or the DSDT is set wrong.īut I can create a VM in VirtualBox on an x86-64 Mac using one of these hackintosh methods, and it boots fine. I'm trying to install a free utility (Caffeine) and I get the same problem: the spinning cursor, but no actual progress.I'm working on getting 10.4 x86 through 12 running in UTM so far, the recalcitrant ones have been 10.4, 10.5, 10.6, 11 and 12: Arctic Fox will build for Mac OS X 10.6 and up, Windows XP, i386/x8664/PowerPC Linux, and more than likely any other Unix/BSD varient. Examples would be Mac OSX 10.6-10.8, PowerPC's running Linux, Windows XP, etc. The problem seems to be with the App Store. The goal here is to implement specific security updates and bug fixes to keep this browser as up to date as possible for aging systems. So - without access to the purchase record of the machine, but with admin privileges, how can I see what is going on? Ideally, how can I upgrade this machine to Yosemite? If you experience any compatibility issues with NetShade for Mac, consider downloading one of the older versions of NetShade. I've looked at this answer but I find that the CRL is already set to "off". Download Old Versions of NetShade: 7.1 - 5.4.2. Forcing destination format to ARGB_8 for CG_Context". The DVD will install Mac OS X 10.6.3, so open  > Software Update and install Mac OS X 10.6.8. I've found the Console Messages, but the only thing I see there is "This isn't a bitmap context. I do have admin privileges on the machine. An internet search told me to check the "Purchases" tab on the App Store, but for that I need my boss's password. The next day, after more than 20 hours, I still saw the spinning cursor. I thought that maybe it was just a huge download, so I left it on for the night. When I try the update to Yosemite, though, I get the spinning cursor and it stays that way. ![]() I first did the "Software Updates" which was ready in a few minutes. The "About this Mac" gives me the following information: I have an old Mac, currently running Mac OS X 10.6.8 "Snow Leopard" that I must upgrade to OS X 10.10 "Yosemite". ![]()
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