If you want to roll your own with tweaked drivers etc, the latest version is available at. Note3: The X86 installs depend on OpenCore EFI to boot correctly. UTM already adds a tablet device by default. I've had to add "-usbdevice keyboard" to the QEMU list for OS X 10.2 and up. Note2: On an M1 MBP, I've had issues with keyboard input for all emulated hardware types. The date will automatically reset once the install is complete. Then quit Terminal and continue your install session. To fix this, open up Terminal from the Utilities menu and type date -u 0101010115 (the last two digits is the year) or adjust the last digits to the year the installer was released, or any year between that and the year the certificate expired. If your system clock is past the expiry date, the installer will say it can't install on the device. Note: for installing OS X 10.6.8 and up, the certificate is checked to see if it has expired. Disk Utility is available in a menu item in the installer. You may need to enter Disk Utility and format the included drive image prior to running your installation if a drive target is not available in the install window. Inside the UTM interface, select your virtual machine, Select the CD/DVD drop-down, click Browse, and open the img file you downloaded with fetch-macOS-v2.py (or some other way).Note that some of these can't be converted from an M1 Mac (but can be converted from inside an x86-64 UTM guest).
If using full installers instead of just the baseconfig.img files, you can run to convert the.
Other installer locations are provided inside the config notes.