So already I botched the Nvidia driver update, I decided to just reinstall OSX over the same qemu disk file and start from 10.11.1 again. I hadn't really installed much so getting everything back to the way it was wasn't going to be much of an issue.
Interestingly enough, once I had installed over the original disk using the OSX installer, it turned out all of my data was kept, applications and everything, and even better, I was on 10.11.1! So running the installer over your original install essentially downgrades OSX. Pretty neat! Hopefully this helps someone who needs to downgrade for whatever reason and doesn't have a snapshot/backup. Andrew Morgan On 12/09/2015 08:57 PM, Okky Hendriansyah wrote: > On December 9, 2015 at 07:58:21, Andrew Morgan > (andrew.morgan4...@gmail.com <mailto:andrew.morgan4...@gmail.com>) wrote: >> ... >> Afterwards, I decided to take a chance to update to OSX 10.11.2. Had to >> disable the nvda_drv=1 setting I just set to get through the >> installation after the reboot, but after that it went alright. >> >> I did notice after upgrading that Nvidia Web drivers were no longer >> compatible with my OS, though I suppose this makes sense since the >> update did just roll out, thus I suspect Nvidia will update it soon >> enough. This does however mean my GPU no longer works when I pass it >> through again... so that's a bit of a bummer. I'll make sure to hold out >> until nvidia does this for future OSX updates. > > Hi Andrew, > > Actually I just noticed about this update after you mentioned it, I went > to upgrading my MacBook Pro instead, haha Thanks for pointing about this > possible issue on upgrading the Mac OS X guest. Yeah I agree with you, > to hold out until NVIDIA releases their updated Web Driver as well. I > usually snapshot my guest image before upgrading (like upgrading my > Windows 10 to Threshold 2 last November), so can rollback if found a > deadend. > >> As for Xcode development, I've just been using the simulator for the >> past few months, and it's been quite good at catching most of the bugs! >> Of course, one doesn't quite get the same feel for the UX using a mouse, >> but apps like fabric.io and Apple's now own TestFlight can provide ipa >> installs OTA. > > Hmm, I’m quite new in iOS development and just found out about this > TestFlight, I’ll check it again. At the very least, I can still git pull > and deploy from my MacBook Pro in case I want to feel the native UX on > the iOS device. I also want to try feeding the Xcode with the iOS > device through NoMachine USB adapter, I don’t know whether it will be > 100% compatible though. > >> I'll have to try that NoMachine audio out at some point. For now it's >> not really a big deal, but I can see it being necessary when developing >> an app that outputs a noise of some kind :P >> >> Thanks, >> Andrew Morgan > > Having a silent OS is not really fun actually. :D You should try it, > although it’s not really seemless experience to enable it. Since I have > to initiate the NoMachine client to the server in Mac OS X and have my > remote desktop shown all the time. But hey, the audio worked! :D > > -- > *Okky Hendriansyah* > _______________________________________________ vfio-users mailing list vfio-users@redhat.com https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/vfio-users