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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. Under no circumstances is it legal to try running macOS in VirtualBox on a none Apple Mac computer. I found how to emulate the Windows key (using the right Command key) but couldnt find how to close windows using keyboard shortcut under a normal Windows host I just press Alt-F4 but I dont know how to generate this keyboard combination with my Macbook keyboard. As you would be doing this on a real Mac it is covered by the Macs license for macOS. I have a Windows virtual host running under Mac OS X. You can check FAQs for Credentials( Username & Password) for VDI images. If you are running VirtualBox on a real Mac then it is legal to run a virtual copy of macOS as a virtual machine. 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. I posted a detailed guide on my blog about how to create a Yosemite VM, feel free to check it out if you're interested.We offer open-source (Linux/Unix) virtual machines (VDIs) for VirtualBox, we install and make them ready-to-use VirtualBox images for you. Graphics are still slow (and it's even worse in Yosemite) but besides the login screen which takes a good 5 seconds to render due to its transparency, everything else is pretty usable, and it's enough for occasional (hobby) iOS development until you get enough experience to make profitable apps in which case it's still better to buy a real Mac as this setup may break at any update. An SSD is a must have though, a hard drive will be bloody slow (that's also true for a real Mac).
Overview of Mac OS X El Capitan on Virtualbox on Windows. Also Read:-How to Install macOS High Sierra on Virtualbox. 3 Configure a minimum of 4 GB RAM for the macOS High Sierra VM and click on the Next button. 2 In the Create Virtual Machine window, type the name of the macOS system in Name section. The solution is to determine the serial number of the real Mac by opening About This Mac or running System Information. Right when you are proposing to run Mac OS X 10.11 EL Capitan on VirtualBox and that too on windows, it will butcher a limited quantity of your extra essentialness yet when done it is awesome. Create a Mac OS VM Using Oracle VBox 1 Open VirtualBox software and click the New button to create a new VM for MacOS. But due to the serial number being 0 the App Store and Server applications will not work.
In the end, with my solution I am able to successfully run Yosemite with 3,5GB of RAM (out of the 4GBs of my computer, and by tweaking the host system I could probably push it even more to 3,7GB), using the two cores of my CPU, with reliable USB pass through and no tweaking required (the emulated hardware is close enough to a real Mac that the OS boots directly without any kernel command line parameters or extra kexts). Of course OS X runs just fine inside VirtualBox running on a Mac even in that case. What you can do (and I have done it with much success) is use a lightweight Linux installation as a base for QEMU which is a Virtualbox alternative, with much more configuration options, including the ability to emulate the Apple SMC and its "OSK" string (you won't need shady "hackintosh" kexts) and it has reliable USB pass through (I successfully restored iOS devices and installed apps on them). Virtualbox on Windows is definitely not suitable for this, as Windows itself is quite resource-hungry, Virtualbox lacks many configuration options and even if you can get it to work it's going to be quite unreliable, not to mention that you can't pass through USB devices.