Again that's the whole plist thing. It contains the list of supported model 
numbers for ‎every thing. Not even the driver just model numbers. Once a model 
number is added it auto detects the driver correctly as long as it's supported 
in Open Darwin

Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone.
  Original Message  
From: Kevin K
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2015 18:18
To: ToddAndMargo
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: KVM and OSx

I experimented once moving a VMWare Fusion OSX guest to my Linux system, and 
tried it under VMWare Player. Crashed VERY early. My understanding from some 
searches is that OSX will do some CPU ID checking, and my AMD did NOT pass 
muster as being on a genuine Apple system.

If I had a Linux system running on a CPU used in an existing Mac, then it may 
have been more successful.

Running as a guest (even under Linux) on genuine Mac hardware probably passes 
this test.

> On Mar 20, 2015, at 4:43 PM, ToddAndMargo <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> On 03/19/2015 12:45 PM, ToddAndMargo wrote:
>> Hi All,
>> 
>> Anyone get OSx working in KVM?
>> 
>> -T
>> 
> 
> Looking over at:
> 
> http://www.contrib.andrew.cmu.edu/~somlo/OSXKVM/
> 
> Legal Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, and this is
> not legal advice. Taking into account that OS X is
> now officially supported on commercial virtualization
> solutions such as VMWare Fusion and Parallels, and after
> a careful reading of Apple's OS X EULA (which states
> that "[...] you are granted a [...] license to install,
> use and run one (1) copy of the Apple Software on a
> single Apple-Branded computer at any one time"), it
> is my belief that it's OK to run Mac OS X as a QEMU
> guest, provided the host hardware is a genuine,
> Apple-manufactured Mac computer, running an arbitrary
> (e.g. Linux) host OS. This happens to be how I'm
> using it, but YMMV.
> 
> Yikes!
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> Computers are like air conditioners.
> They malfunction when you open windows
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

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