Docker-OSX
OpenCore-Install-Guide
Our great sponsors
Docker-OSX | OpenCore-Install-Guide | |
---|---|---|
132 | 1,338 | |
35,059 | 3,653 | |
- | 1.4% | |
1.0 | 3.6 | |
9 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
Shell | JavaScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Docker-OSX
-
GitHub Actions as a time-sharing supercomputer
Running macOS legally requires real mac servers and a bespoke storage solution: https://www.datacenterdynamics.com/en/analysis/not-just-stac...
A self-hosted macOS runner will be more economical in the long-run, if you have a spot you can hook it up at, or if you're fine doing things less than legally, you can use https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX.
-
macOS Containers v0.0.1
> What's the licensing situation on this?
1. This project didn't take explicit permission from Apple to redistribute binaries
2. There are multiple jurisdictions where you don't need to explicitly have such permission, it is implied by law
3. Usage of this software implies you already have macOS system. I'm not a lawyer, but it looks to be covered by section 3 of macOS EULA.
4. There are existing precedents of redistribution of macOS binaries for multiple years aready:
- https://github.com/cirruslabs/macos-image-templates/pkgs/con...
- https://hub.docker.com/r/sickcodes/docker-osx
- https://app.vagrantup.com/jhcook/boxes/macos-sierra
And so on.
-
Android Dev account terminated after 12 years for violating “Stalkerware policy”
Google is “friendlier”, because they run some automated scans on the apk and you’re good. Apple has humans run your app to confirm it does what you claim, as well as a battery of automated scans and since they are using the app I’d imagine they look at network traffic as much as possible. I know iOS isn’t shielded from malicious apps, but there’s malware and viruses all over the play store. That’s because it’s free and “friendlier”.
> At Apple things have gotten way worse. Trying to automate release building is practically impossible and will require hours or CI pipeline debugging with error messages that don't mean what they say.
This isn’t Apple’s fault… every build system sucks up a decent amount of time during initial setup. You can cut down massive amounts of time between iterations by adding some common optimizations:
1. Cache artifacts when that step or job succeeds, so if a subsequent step/job fails, you can adjust it and start up where you left off, using the caches artifact to restore the workspace state. This complicates debugging efforts and I personally don’t do any optimization until the pipeline is reliably green each time. I just deal with slow builds and switch to other stuff or work ahead while they run.
2. Fail fast. The CI run should bail out if any critical steps don’t pass, so anything further down doesn’t run for no reason, burning compute time and delaying queued jobs waiting for a runner. While developing the pipeline, watch the logs and when you see something you don’t like, slap the cancel button, or collect a couple things you need to change and iterate with passes with 2-3 changes.
3. Use adequately spec’s hardware. Xcode is resource heavy and compiles need plenty of memory and cpu cores. Play around with what is a good compromise between power and cost. See if your project builds faster with more cpu cores, or faster cpu cores, etc.
> At least Googles process is quite simple and can be dockerized.
One man’s simple is another man’s “practically impossible”. Simple comes from familiarity and confidence. Anyway, you can totally run your builds in docker if you want to, and many do, but I’d personally not introduce more complexity until you have your pipelines running the slow way with the least amount of mental modeling to do. Once you know it all works, then have a go at running the build you know is good, inside a docker container (which in this case is just packing up kvm/qemu/libvirt to facilitate the running of a vm back on the host, but it means you can run mac containers on Linux runners, which will be much cheaper than Mac runners since those are usually Mac hardware)
https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX
> Also why do I have to pay Apple $125 a year when it costs $100 in the US? The exchange rate from CHF to USD should be in my favor.
Couple theories. 1. They have additional processing or tax expenses when dealing with your currency which they aren’t going to eat the cost of. 2. The higher price could be to deter abuse if for some reason there is an abnormal amount originating from accounts who pay with that currency.
-
Lima: A nice way to run Linux VMs on Mac
You can use qemu/libvirt/kvm on any Linux host to run macOS pretty easily these days[1]. I run Ventura on unraid with nvidea gpu passthrough and it’s been fairly painless.
You can also run macOS in docker, but it’s ultimately running through qemu/kvm as well[2]
-
Releasing Wolf: Stream virtual desktops and games in Docker
We are able to play Windows videogames using Steam Proton but that's not really the primary goal of Wolf which is to allow multiple concurrent sessions from a single machine. You can run any kind of Docker container, for example there are people playing right now with a full OSX installation in Docker.
- Worth it to buy a MacBook for flutter development when I have a high end Windows laptop?
-
My sad and painful hackintosh journey
This all started around 6 months ago, when I really looked into macos, I used to be part of the group that stays happy with their cute little linux install and customised the hell out of it. Then one day, I decided out of nowhere that I'm gonna somehow install macos. With an 8th gen i3 acer laptop with integrated graphics, that didn't seem way out of the question, sadly the laptop wasn't well known at the time, nor did it have extra slots for other drives, so it was just me and my linux drive, that's when I came across the MacOS docker project. With a lot, lot of troubleshooting, I could get it running - for 10 minutes, when it crashed, it obviously wasn't made for my system to handle on a VM.
-
Mac VMs with GUI for ui-tests
Haven't used it much, but maybe https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX?
-
Chocolate, an opensource alternative to Plex
This is what you want, forget Proxmox. This is simple to set up and will give you the dev environment you need I believe. https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX
-
WebKit Features in Safari 16.4
An ok, no great, but ok, solution: https://github.com/sickcodes/Docker-OSX
OpenCore-Install-Guide
- Most hackintoshible laptop with a good GPU?
- How to update from Catalina 10.15.7 to Catalina 11 on a 2011 Macbook
-
Back in September, my old T420 which I had since I was 8 finally died, and I ended up buying an EliteBook to replace it. That ended up dying after 5 months of use, so I made the correct choice for my new laptop and got a T480s.
Dortania's OpenCore Install Guide. It's quite long but thats because it's trying to cover a near infinite amount of hardware combinations for like 20 years worth of hardware
-
Worth it to buy a MacBook for flutter development when I have a high end Windows laptop?
Check r/hackintosh and opencore guide
- [NGFF/M2 SSD] what is blud planning
-
Need a Hackintosh setup
Don't forget to read through the sidebar and the Dortania guide as it contains tons of information regarding compatibility, requirements, and more information required to hackintosh.
- My sad and painful hackintosh journey
-
Intel i3 8100 & UHD 630 | macOS Monterey
I successfully install macOS Monterey in an i3 8100 and UHD 630 Hackintosh following the Dortania OpenCore Install Guide (https://dortania.github.io/OpenCore-Install-Guide/). However, patience and determination were key to making it work
-
Help with IGPU on surface book 2
Did you followed Dortania’s OpenCore Install Guide?
What are some alternatives?
hackintosh-msi-gf63-thin-10SCXR - Setting up hackintosh on this MSI laptop - Intel Core i7 10th Gen
lima - Linux virtual machines, with a focus on running containers
Hackintosh-ThinkPad-E14 - Files required for prepping a Hackintosh on ThinkPad E14.
OpenCorePkg - OpenCore bootloader
Patch-HD4000-Monterey - Use Intel HD 4000 on Monterey 12 for Ivy Bridge CPU
OC-Gen-X - OpenCore Config Generator
OSX-KVM - Run macOS on QEMU/KVM. With OpenCore + Monterey + Ventura + Sonoma support now! Only commercial (paid) support is available now to avoid spammy issues. No Mac system is required.
Surface-Pro-2017-OpenCore-EFI - Surface Pro 2017 i5 HD620 OpenCore EFI for 10.15.6 and 10.15.7 + Big Sur
Hackintosh-Dell-Latitude-7390-2-in-1-OpenCore-EFI
Nitro-5-AN515-54-Hackintosh - Acer Nitro 5 - AN515-54 Hackintosh
Opencore-Legacy-Patcher - [Moved to: https://github.com/dortania/OpenCore-Legacy-Patcher]
macOS-Simple-KVM - Tools to set up a quick macOS VM in QEMU, accelerated by KVM.