How to Install OS X El Capitan on Windows Using VirtualBox OS X El Capitan is indeed a great system developed by Apple so far, it can also be installed inside a Windows PC with some tricks. Usually we only need to install Virtualbox such virtual machines on Windows to run the Mac OS X.
How to create an OS X El Capitan VM that will run on Linux VirtualBox only officially supports OS X guests on an OS X host, but it is possible to create one on an OS X host and transfer it over to a Linux host. This tutorial will go over one possible way to accomplish this task. What you will need. An Apple computer running OS X 10.11. A Linux computer to transfer the VM over to. 20 GB free on the Apple Machine. 40 GB free on the Linux Machine Step One: VMWare Install VMWare Fusion Pro on your OSX Host ( ).
![Capitan Capitan](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125512481/902584340.jpg)
Open it up and select File - New. On the 'Select the Installation Method' menu, choose 'Install OSX from the recovery partition'. Follow the instructions and soon OSX will start installing in a VMWare VM. Go through the OSX installation process until the point where OSX asks you to setup the installation (IE: create users, etc). This could take up to two hours. When its done, shutdown the VMWare VM. In the VMWare 'Virtual Machine Library' menu, select the OSX VM you just created, and then select File - Export To OVF.
![Install Install](/uploads/1/2/5/5/125512481/631502356.png)
This will create a folder with three files in it:.mf.ovf.vmdk Step Two: Modify the OVF Files Next we need to take care of a few inconsistencies between VMWare's OVF format and VirtualBox's OVF format. Run the following commands on the.ovf file: sed -i -e 's/vmware.sata.ahci/AHCI/g'.ovf sed -i -e 's/ElementName/Caption/g'.ovf Since we have modified the OVF file, its SHA1 checksum will have changed. We need to update the.mf file to account for these changes. The.mf file should look something like this: SHA1(.ovf)= 640e7ddd6b5c69a9f9602e3664daaa SHA1(.vmdk)= 61b742dddcf99405ad5b6989c1e467 Run: shasum.ovf Take the resulting hash and replace the hash after SHA1(.ovf)= in.mf with this result. Copy the OVF folder with all three files over to the Linux Machine.
Step Three: Import OVF into Linux host VirtualBox Open up virtualbox on the Linux host, and import the OVF. You'll need to set the VM OS Type to 'Mac OS X' and the OS Version to 'Mac OS X 10.11 El-capitan (64-bit)'.