That’s okay, because VMware Fusion 4 is here, and it’s been specifically designed to run on Mac OS X Lion, with a nice list of other new enhancements. Obviously this can be tweaked to your needs (or you could decide not to use a template at all), but for all those fancy things I’ll have to refer you to the vFuse wiki here.If you’re a Mac-toting IT admin, VAR or MSP, it’s very likely you can’t get away from needing to run Windows or Windows applications. Those who are unfamiliar with vFuse might want to have a look at one of my previous post here, but for those who just want to know what to change in the template, here is my basic template to use with vFuse. With VMWare Fusion 11.5 goes a compatible vFuse version, so I went for the latest (at this moment of writing) version 2.2.5. I used the (at this moment of writing) pre-release version v1.10b587 which worked fine. VFuse needs a macOS DMG to create the VM, so no better tool imo than AutoDMG. Reboot your server and DONE! VMWare Fusion 11.5īecause vFuse needs VMWare Fusion to be running, and we need Catalina support, we need to upgrade our VMWare Fusion to 11.5.
#Mac tweak for vmware update
If all goes well, you will end up with a long block of text confirming the update is completed.
#Mac tweak for vmware install
The hierarchy of files and paths of the zip file needs to be maintained.Īfter uploading the bundle to the datastore, and putting the server in maintenance mode, the only thing left to do is run the following command: esxcli software vib install -d “/vmfs/volumes/Datastore/DirectoryName/EXACT-NAME-OF-THE-BUNDLE-FILE.zip” If that's the case, compress it again but make sure to only add the subfolders and files to the archive and not the main folder where the content was zipped to. zip bundle on macOS it might automatically unzip it depending your system preferences.