Thibault Maekelbergh

Installing OS X 10.11 as a VM

Finding a beta and creating the dmg


The beta releases are available to anyone enrolled to the Apple Developer Program. Sadly my enrollment is college bound and doesn't let me do anything besides get a provision for side-loading Xcode projects on my iPhone.

Luckily, shade.sh uploads the beta's with a valid shasum so it's pretty safe to grab one from there. So I downloaded this file (around 6GB) and uncompressed it.

Damn, first obstacle. The zip file uncompresses to a .app to install 10.11 on a partition on your HDD/SSD. I wanted to run it in a VM and not partition my SSD to install it and just throw it away later when I could just delete the Parallels VM instead.

Looking at the .app's Contents folder and searching Spotlight for .dmg I found out there was a disk image called "InstallESD.dmg" but it couldn't be mounted into Parallels. So I headed to Safari and searched for ESD.

After browsing for a while I found out there is a RubyGem to create DMG files from the .app Installer, called iesd. Installing was as easy as any other gem with:

ruby
gem install iesd

This in place it was time to create it with a simple input/output task for iesd:

console
iesd -i Downloads/Install\ OS\ X\ 10.11\ Developer\ Beta.app/ -o Desktop/Capitan.dmg -t BaseSystem

This took about 5 minutes to create the DMG on my desktop. Everything was now in place, and I could head over to the actual installing now.

Setting up Parallels for 10.11


I love to use Parallels because it blows the competition out of the water and has a much more friendly UI and easier settings to adjust. The method below works for probably any VM app like VMWare or Virtualbox, as long as you set the hardware correctly.

Starting off by creating a new VM and loading the dmg in the VM's CD drive, you'll want to prevent the VM from booting because the default settings will make OS X kernel panic in the VM. Parallels has a checkbox you can tick in the setup process for this called "Customize settings before installation".

Since my purpose was to only test Safari's Web Inspector, it would be stupid to use a dynamically sizing virtual HDD anyway. Delete the one that Parallels already sets up for you and then create a new non-dynamic disk with at least 32GB storage.

Checking the source for installation

The thing that makes kernel panics happen inside the VM is the connection with webcams and USB 3.0, so make sure you disable connected FaceTime camera's and USB 3.0 support (resides under the USB & Bluetooth category in Parallels)

Disable Facetime and USB 3 in Parallels

Since Lion, every release of OS X has only required 2GB of RAM so that would be the minimum amount you would have to assign to the VM. I assigned 4GB because I have 16 in total and had some to spare. (Remember 2GB = 2048MB)

Picking a good amount of RAM 2GB

To round up make sure to assign at least 128MB VRAM to the VM. At 128MB it will run at bare minimum graphic speed so assign more if you have a decent GPU. I assigned 512MB of my dedicated GPU in my Retina which has 2GB.

Make sure the dmg is still loaded in the CD/DVD slot and boot the VM. OS X install should become active and just install it like you would with any other OS X install. Ok so now I was pretty much at the point to test out the new Web Inspector.

Safari 9 Web Inspector


The new tabbed view will make it much easier to change views when debugging or inspecting. Feels great to quickly switch to console from the node inspector view with keyboard shortcuts.

Tabbed Web Inspector

That new Adaptive Viewer is designed in a sleek but functional form with options for all current Apple devices and common screen sizes to view from. User Agents can still be assigned like they could before, but if I'm correct there are more options for platforms now.

Adaptive View is great and I'm really looking forward to working with it, especially since it also includes the option to set pixel density. One thing I'm missing though is some way to create your own resolutions to test from. Currently there are only three sizes (800x600, 1366x768, 1920x1080) but I'd love the option to add in my own sizes like 1024x768.

Responsive View in Safari 9