agressivstreeetlamp
Cadet
- Joined
- Nov 16, 2023
- Messages
- 5
Alright I am installing Big Sur on Treunas as we speak Hopefully it works but it should at this point.
Wrting this now so I don't forget. Thanks for @Straafe for sharing this CLI settings.
(I will try ventura later but Big Sur is what was recommended by the script). I am on a Dell R320 with Xeon e5-2470v2 server.
So I simply create a VM via the GUI, don't start it yet
- use Linux as the Guest Operating System and
- create a new ZVOL for the main disk of 64 GB (min 50GB, I Believe)
- use UEFI boot method
- I added a install image in the GUI but this did not work initially
Then go to devices in the Truenas GUIO for the VM and add both the
- BaseSystem.img and OpenCore-v20.iso as RAW files of AHCI type
- you can remove the CDroms but keep the DISK/ZVTOL you created in the GUI
Then use CLI
in GUI open Shell of Truenas then change the settings of the machine (see earlier comment) the following:
NO # or ' should be present.
You should be able to boot into Macintosh recovery.
Now use disk manager to "erase" (really format but never understood Macintosh's naming scheme)
I used the standard options.
GUID partition, APFS and the other standard one.
Wrting this now so I don't forget. Thanks for @Straafe for sharing this CLI settings.
(I will try ventura later but Big Sur is what was recommended by the script). I am on a Dell R320 with Xeon e5-2470v2 server.
So I simply create a VM via the GUI, don't start it yet
- use Linux as the Guest Operating System and
- create a new ZVOL for the main disk of 64 GB (min 50GB, I Believe)
- use UEFI boot method
- I added a install image in the GUI but this did not work initially
Then go to devices in the Truenas GUIO for the VM and add both the
- BaseSystem.img and OpenCore-v20.iso as RAW files of AHCI type
- you can remove the CDroms but keep the DISK/ZVTOL you created in the GUI
Then use CLI
in GUI open Shell of Truenas then change the settings of the machine (see earlier comment) the following:
NO # or ' should be present.
You should be able to boot into Macintosh recovery.
Now use disk manager to "erase" (really format but never understood Macintosh's naming scheme)
I used the standard options.
GUID partition, APFS and the other standard one.