Je partage avec vous un tutorial trouvé sur les forums de discussion Apple pour virtualiser SnowLeopard sous VMWare Fusion:
Step 1: Using Disk Utility, create a legal backup image of the Snow Leopard installation disc. Make sure you select DVD/CD Master for the Image Format.
Step 2: Mount the image.
Step 3: Using Apple's Terminal program, type the following:
cd "/Volumes/Mac OS X Install DVD/System/Library/CoreServices"
sudo touch ServerVersion.plist
Note: This does not alter Apple's software in any way, nor does it turn the SL OS into a server OS - it just bypasses a VMware block that normally prevents the loading of a non-server OS.
Step 4: Keep the image mounted and run Fusion.
Step 5: Select "New" in Fusion to create a new virtual machine.
Step 6: Select "Continue without disc"
Step 7: Select "Use operating system installation disc or image:" and then select the disc image you just created.
Note: Make sure you uncheck the "2GB segments" option.
Step 8: Run the Installation program. You can customize or modify the setup just as you can on a direct install on a Macintosh.
Step 9: When the Virtual Machine attempts to restart and boot off of the new operating system, it will flag that it isn't the server version. The same dummy file needs to be placed into the same CoreServices location in the new OS. Just repeat the above Step 3, substituting the volume name with whatever you called your virtual HD.
Step 10: Enjoy your Rosetta programs after you upgrade to Lion!
Step 1: Using Disk Utility, create a legal backup image of the Snow Leopard installation disc. Make sure you select DVD/CD Master for the Image Format.
Step 2: Mount the image.
Step 3: Using Apple's Terminal program, type the following:
cd "/Volumes/Mac OS X Install DVD/System/Library/CoreServices"
sudo touch ServerVersion.plist
Note: This does not alter Apple's software in any way, nor does it turn the SL OS into a server OS - it just bypasses a VMware block that normally prevents the loading of a non-server OS.
Step 4: Keep the image mounted and run Fusion.
Step 5: Select "New" in Fusion to create a new virtual machine.
Step 6: Select "Continue without disc"
Step 7: Select "Use operating system installation disc or image:" and then select the disc image you just created.
Note: Make sure you uncheck the "2GB segments" option.
Step 8: Run the Installation program. You can customize or modify the setup just as you can on a direct install on a Macintosh.
Step 9: When the Virtual Machine attempts to restart and boot off of the new operating system, it will flag that it isn't the server version. The same dummy file needs to be placed into the same CoreServices location in the new OS. Just repeat the above Step 3, substituting the volume name with whatever you called your virtual HD.
Step 10: Enjoy your Rosetta programs after you upgrade to Lion!