- #Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode mac os x#
- #Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode install#
- #Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode drivers#
If you resize the window manually, you'll lose this mode, but getting it back is as easy as reselecting it in the Displays System Preferences panel. How well does it work? Well, the Displays screenshot above was captured in the virtual machine, and it's clearly a retina image, so I'd say it works very well. That's it-you're now looking at a full retina display in your macOS/OS X virtual machine.
#Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode drivers#
This makes the text and icons to appear small in the OS X interface. VMware Tools loads the drivers required to optimize a virtual machine's performance.
#Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode mac os x#
Mac OS X running in a virtual machine is limited to an approximate resolution of 2560 x 1600, and treats the display as a standard DPI device. VMware even warns you of this in their Knowledge Base: On my 27" iMac, that meant the macOS VM thought it was running at (for example) 2560x1600 instead of a retina resolution of 1280x800. …well, I enabled it once, but turned it off, because the end result was too small to see: In Retina mode, every pixel is an actual pixel, not a doubled pixel.
In all the time I've been using Fusion on my retina Macs, though, I've never enabled this setting… (I have a bunch of non-macOS virtual machines, too, but they're not relevant to this tidbit.) Create a bootable recovery disk using the instructions here on the new hard disk.
#Vmware fusion mac os recovery mode install#
Download the Install Big Sur application from the App Store. I use the more-recent of these for supporting our customers on older versions of the OS, and keep the really old versions just for nostalgia purposes. Boot the macOS VM and format the new hard disk in the guest macOS VM as HFS+ (not apfs). I use VMware Fusion often-I have virtual machines that span Mac OS X 10.6 to macOS 10.12.4 beta.