I have virtualbox running an Os X 10.11 El Capitan VM and I want to be able to boot my computer into OS X, but I can't figure out how to create a usb that my computer will successfully boot to or try to install mac to install to a partition. I've tried transmac and much googling. I was wondering if there is a way to use my existing .vdmk file to boot to a partition on my computer or if there is another solution.
I have heard about two possible solutions (but I never try them):
First - you can try convert your .vdmk file into an iso image, and then boot to a partition on your computer.
Second - you can try clone your .vdmk file using Clonezilla (http://clonezilla.org/) and then boot from It.
Hope it works for you.
Related
I am using Arch Linux 5.3.13-arch1-1 and libvirt 5.9.0.
After I made a linux update (sudo pacman -Syu), I got the new, libvirt version mentioned above.
But soon after I realized, while programming in Eclipse, that copy paste does not work anymore. After couple of tries, when I try to copy some lines of code, it freezes for a short time, and looses the copied text in the clipboard.
I converted the VMs into vdi and continuing to work with Virtual Box. There, on the same laptop and the same VM, I don't have that issue!
Is this a known issue? I've got other VMs which are optimized for KVM.
Goal
I was attempting to install Elastix 4.0 on a home PC via a Bootable USB, but never had any luck getting it to install past the CentOS7 part (it kept giving me a "Warning: /dev/root does not exist" error).
What I've Tried
My main PC is Windows 10 Pro, so after downloading the latest Elastix 4.0 .iso from "http://www.elastix.com/en/downloads/" (Elastix-4.0.74-Stable-x86_64-bin-10Feb2016.iso) I used UNetbootin to create my Bootable USB for Elastix 4.0. I put the now Bootable USB into the PC I want to put Elastix 4.0 on and started it up.
It gave me the "Install Elastix 4" menu, so I hit enter and waited. Then the install proceeded to do its checks for CentOS7, but ended up getting stuck and gave me an error message "dracut-initqueue[580]: Warning: Could not boot." and "Warning: /dev/root does not exist".
This is where I am stuck and cannot proceed.
EDIT #1: I signed up for the Elastix forms, and someone else also had this issue. They said they downloaded the .iso and used Rufus to make a Bootable USB, and then booted the installation using the Troubleshooting -> Install CentOS 7 using Basic Graphics ... but according to them, that apparently corrupted something else and then they opted to just use a DVD.
EDIT #2: I tested this, and making a Bootable DVD of the .iso does work great for local machines. Installing it via a VM also seems to work without hassle. As a personal goal, I would like to get this working via a Bootable USB.
Research
I did some research but a lot of the solutions I've noticed are using the dd command in Linux to make a Bootable USB for just CentOS7 because it is (was?) known that UNetbootin did not properly make a Bootable USB for CentOS7, and I can't seem to find anything that would assist in making the Elastix 4.0 .iso work properly via a Bootable USB. I did try other tools such as Rufus 2.7, Win32 Disk Imager, ISO2USB, and dd for Windows, though most rendered my USB not bootable at all (Rufus worked OK, but still got stuck at the CentOS7 part). Also, installing via a CD/DVD is not ideal, as I have no CD/DVD drive (and I want to see if I can get this working via a Bootable USB drive).
There seem to be a few guides out there for trying to create a Bootable USB for Elastix 2.x, but nothing for Elastix 4.0. Reviewing those, it looks like the guides reference some files that do not exist in the new .iso (ex: ks_default.cfg). Still, my issue pertains mainly to the CentOS7 error I'm getting so I don't think this is related.
Any assistance with this is appreciated, and if you require more information from my end just let me know. I'm willing to try / re-try anything.
Thank you in advance.
http://henrysittechblog.blogspot.ru/2014/01/install-elastix-from-usb-step-by-step.html
Look for this line, but it may change:
append initrd=initrd.img inst.stage2=hd:LABEL=CentOS\x207\x20x86_64 inst.ks=cdrom:/dev/cdrom:/ks/anaconda-ks.cfg quiet
Change it to:
append initrd=initrd.img inst.stage2=hd:LABEL=CentOS\x207\x20x86_64 inst.ks=sdb1:/dev/sdb1:/ks/anaconda-ks.cfg quiet
Hi there i solve this problem 80%.
i did some manual change at line:
inst.ks=cdrom:/dev/cdrom:/ks/anaconda-ks.cfg quiet
Mine:
inst.ks=scsi:/dev/sdb1:/ks/anaconda-ks.cfg quiet
hd is not recogniced by Centos7.
made my usb bootable with rufus 2.9
then open isolinux.cfg with notepad++
just change the line
inst.ks=hd:sdb1:/ks/anaconda-ks.cfg quiet
where sdb1 used to say cdrom
http://zzsethzz.blogspot.de/2013/02/install-chromium-upgrade-it-to-chrome.html
According this tutorial, I should remove all HDDs I do not want to install chromium OS to during install. I wanted to try this guide on my imac using an external SSD for chromeos. Obviously, removing the HDD isn't an option. Will the chromiumOS installer format my mac drive too, if I don't remove it?
AS the writer of that tutorial I can hopefully help you. When you install Chromium OS to begin with you can specify where to install to if you know your unix commands well enough. and then from there you can update to Chrome OS once you have your external working for you.
To find out what your hard drive is when connected, open a terminal (you may need to use a developer terminal) and use the command "fdisk -l" This will list your hard drives. for example /dev/sda1 etc...
Your install command would be "Install /Dev/sda1" but replace the dev part with whatever your hard drive was listed as. If you need further help email me at admin#xiaorishu.co.uk
I am trying to ssh into a remote Linux server using x11. I found that Mountain Lion no longer supports x11 when I upgraded, so I installed Quartz. However, my terminal commands are not working anymore. Here are two important terminal commands that no longer work for me.
I did a Google search and looked elsewhere on Stack Overflow, but didn't find what I am looking for. Namely, I was hoping there are some new commands that work with Quartz in place of the standard x11 phrases I have been using. I tried these after I installed Quartz on my machine, and it didn't work. I just taught myself these x11 commands on 10.7 when 10.8 just came out. Here are a few examples.
1.
ssh -X username#serverlocation.com
2.
./configure -- this/is/an/example/directory --enable--gdb --with-x -with-x11 --with-term --with-nogui
If anyone could tell me how to get this working with Quartz on Mountain Lion, I would be grateful. Otherwise, I would have to run a VM on my Mac with either Windows and putty in, or try to figure out how to use x11 on my Ubuntu machine.
Have you logged out/in after installing XQuartz? XQuartz is just a distribution of X11 and is completely compatible with what was previously included with the OS X.
Trying to create a virtual machine using VMPlayer, I discovered that as the Chrome OS is now a Release Candidate, it is only available here: http://www.getchrome.eu/download.php
However, there is no .vmdk download but "Live CD" and "USB Disk Image". I've downloaded the "Live CD", but the VMPlayer couldn't create a new machine. Ive tried several samples from the internet, using the following methods:
Create it as Ubuntu.
Create it as a 2.6.x kernel.
Create a blank VM and point the HD to the .iso file.
I keep getting" "Failed to mount RW root filesystem" and then there's a 120 seconds suspension before a reboot (which causes the same error). The screen shot of the log (Alt+F3):
What am I missing?
In the link you've shared there is no .vmdk (and I couldn't find it around the web). So if I were in your shoes I would go to: http://www.chromium.org/chromium-os/developer-guide#TOC-Building-Chromium-OS
and try to built it with the spec (cpu, mem etc') that you have on the VMPlayer.
Another option is to try and install a built that someone did: http://www.tomshardware.com/news/chrome-os-google-vmware-download,9124.html
Good luck.
You can try Chrome OS by deploying ready-to-use Chrome OS VMs by hexxeh.