Vmware Unlocker 3.0.4 ((hot))
is a third-party tool designed to enable macOS virtual machines on VMware products that do not officially support them (such as VMware Workstation on Windows/Linux or VMware ESXi). Version 3.0.4 is one of the older releases in the 3.x series.
: It modifies vmware-vmx to allow macOS to boot and patches vmwarebase.dll (or .so on Linux) so users can select "Apple Mac OS X" as a guest type during VM creation.
A command prompt window will appear. The script will automatically stop VMware services, back up original files, apply the macOS patches, download the latest Darwin tools, and restart the VMware background services. Wait until the command prompt window closes automatically. Step 3: Verify the Patch Launch VMware Workstation. Click .
For Windows users, the package often includes a pre-bundled Python distribution via PyInstaller , meaning you don't need to install Python separately. vmware unlocker 3.0.4
Once unlocked, macOS on VMware can be sluggish without tweaks. Use these settings:
Select the configuration and proceed to the Guest Operating System selection screen.
date 010101012020
VMware Unlocker 3.0.4 patches the hypervisor's binaries, libraries, and templates. It tricks the software into recognizing the host as a compatible platform, adding "Apple Mac OS X" to the operating system selection menu when creating a new virtual machine. Key Features
Verify that (or macOS) is now visible under the operating system list. Creating Your First macOS Virtual Machine
: Because the unlocker requires administrative privileges to rewrite system binaries, always source the utility from trusted, open-source repositories to avoid downloading malware. is a third-party tool designed to enable macOS
Uses simple command-line scripts to stop services, apply patches, and restart services.
: Automatically saves original VMware binaries before applying patches to prevent corruption. Prerequisites and Requirements
Virtualizing macOS on non-Apple hardware breaches Apple’s End User License Agreement (EULA), which states that macOS should only be run on Apple-branded hardware. Consequently, this setup is intended purely for educational, testing, and development purposes. A command prompt window will appear