Re: Proposal to Modify: Testcase dualboot with macOS

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On Tue, Jan 19, 2021 at 12:55 PM Geoffrey Marr <gmarr@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>
> After reviewing our "dualboot with macOS" testcase [0], I noticed that the testcase says it's based on a Mac running macOS 10.12 Sierra. At this point in time, macOS Sierra is almost 5 years old. I would like to update this testcase to reflect that it supports *any* OS from macOS 10.12 Sierra to macOS 11 Big Sur. I have tested these myself for compatibility and find that they all provide the necessary means for a dualboot install.

It's a teeny modification but you could make it macOS 10.13 High
Sierra as the cutoff. There's a chunk of hardware for which 10.13 is
the latest officially supported version. And also Apple only supports
two current versions of macOS, which are now 10.15 and 11. The vast
majority of macOS users upgrade within a year, so the bulk of the user
base is on 10.15 and 11.

There is a Fedora Media Writer signing issue related to a macOS bug in
10.13, so I wouldn't fuss one bit if you want to make the test case,
or at least for blocking purposes, 10.14 and higher.

> On a side note, I would also like to include a small notice within the testcase that mentions that Fedora is not supported on the new Apple Silicon M1 computers and that this testcase only applies to Intel-based Macs.

Yep. I expect there's some bootloader and kernel work before
Workstation aarch64 is ready and reliable on M1 macs.

> I have made these changes as I see them to my own wiki page [1]. Please review the page and propose any suggestions here. Feedback is welcome. If I don't hear any major squawks in a week or so, I will merge the changes into the official Fedora QA wiki.

No objections.

Lurking around, I think kparal knows where it is, there's a write up I
did about 4 years ago on how to get an "out of the box" setup on macOS
without having to do a clean install. That is obsolete. It's based on
Core Storage (Apple's logical volume manager), whereas since then
Apple has abandoned that entire scheme in favor of a new file system,
APFS, that integrates a volume manager. That write up is probably
easily adapted for APFS - the use case is to get an exact
out-of-the-box setup for back to back test installs without having to
clean install macOS. If it's useful, I can help with a refresh.


-- 
Chris Murphy
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