
You'll have access to: A technical engineer by telephone and email who will. Choose from economical one, three or five Incident packs. VMware offers technical support for VMware Fusion Pro on a Per Incident basis. Get access to a Technical Support Engineer via phone or web. Per Incident Support - Fusion Pro.
Apple MacBook Pro 2021: M1 Pro and M1 Max chips, display notch. With added support for the latest operating systems like Windows 10, advanced users. VMware Fusion 8 Pro takes virtualization on the Mac to the next level with powerful features designed for technical professionals that want to run Windows applications on a Mac without rebooting. All we need is a custom config switch to instruct Fusion to not use the newVMware Fusion Pro The best way to run Windows on a Mac. Contribute to qsypoq/Ansible-VMware-Workstation-Fusion-Pro-Modules development by creating an account on GitHub.> BTW, Fusion 12 on Catalina with these Mac Pros runs great.

Vmware Fusion Pro Code Is In
The fact the kext code is in the shipping product is the kicker.BTW, Catalina and Big Sur will boot on a 2012 Mac Pro by simply editing the OS boot parameters to ignore compatibility check. It is a simple OS check and then activate the kext code that is already there for Catalina.I'm a software engineer of 30+ years and I know what it means to support multiple platforms, multiple architectures, and multiple OSs. That means the kext code is in the product.the same product that doesn't run on Big Sur, so don't give me that ship has sailed line. Unsupported configurations that "work" always come back to bite you in the behind regardless of which side of that fence you're on).Look at my previous post that shows the screen shot documentation for Fusion 12 and that it is supporting 2012 Mac Pros with Catalina and Big Sur.Also, like I said, VMware 12 is running on the Mac Pro under Catalina. Might work, might not, and good luck if you have issues.(I'm not a VMware employee, but I've worked on both sides of the vendor/customer fence. There's no indication though that they will officially support their software on hacked installs of macOS (or as I like to refer to them as "franken-Macs").
Vmware Fusion Pro Full Blown Video
We all know that Apple changes things under the hood between macOS releases and It breaks stuff, and past versions of Fusion kexts have had to be updated as result of those changes. Witness the confusion on whether they support Fusion 12 with Big Sur on M1 Macs for example.Reading through the tea leaves makes me pessimistic that VMware will change course on Big Sur.I understand the ask - but without being both an Apple kernel engineer and a VMware hypervisor developer, I would not assume that the Catalina kexts will work on Big Sur. But I look at Apple's documentation first on what hardware is supported by Catalina and Big Sur.Vmware's documentation has been somewhat less than accurate lately from my experience. These are not toys.I understand what it says. There are 20.7K members of the Mac Pro Upgrade Group on Facebook, who are using these Mac Pros for everything from hobbyists to full blown video editors for their jobs. Updates are another story, but this is another example of planned obsolescence on Apple's part.Oh, one more thing.
System Requirements Apple ID. I shudder to think what the response will be if VMware sent Apple a problem report on what they consider to be an unsupported configuration.There's an interesting tidbit from Apple's macOS EULA in Section 2 Permitted License Uses and Restrictions : But I wouldn't assume that VMware feels the same way about it - hypervisors have hooks into the OS that might need to have a response by Apple if something goes wrong. If it works for you, and others that's fine. Sounds to me like VMware is going full speed ahead on the new Apple hypervisor framework for Big Sur and getting ahead of Apple's announcement that eventually will removes kexts.While there may indeed be a lot of people from hobbyists to professionals using these hacks to get those Mac Pros working with later macOS releases, it does not change the fact that Apple will not support that old Mac Pro hardware with Catalina or Big Sur.
As an example, they have specifically called out macOS versions and "editions" that are supported for use as guest operating systems based on Apple's licensing. Whether it works or not.VMware's behavior in the past has been to not allow things prohibited by Apple's EULA. In addition, use of and access to certain features of the Apple Software and certain Services (as defined in Section 6) may require you to apply for a unique user name and password combination, known as an Apple ID.Since Apple does not list Mac Pros prior to the 2013 version as supporting Big Sur, it is technically a breach of the licensing agreement to run Big Sur on older hardware.
So Parallels has shown that it's possible. Parallels has likely written code that has different dependencies and architectural decisions than VMware does. That code is unique to each vendor. MacOS provides a hypervisor framework that allows a virtualization vendor to write code without using kexts that creates and manages virtual machines, handles "traps" for privileged operations and provides virtual devices.
That leads to a decision point to switch to Parallels if you can't do what you want with Fusion.
