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Apple® announced the next version of the macOS®, High Sierra, on the first day of the Worldwide Developers Conference 2017. They made a beta version available later that day to developers.
You can expect Parallels Mac Management to work seamlessly with macOS High Sierra, with just a few limitations: In rare cases, a Mac may not be able to NetBoot a macOS image; you may see a blank screen at the end of the boot sequence. On August 18th, Parallels updated its Parallels Desktop to version 12. This has been an annual tradition with Parallels, and each new version brings a host of new features and performance. Parallels today announced Parallels Desktop 12 for Mac with support for macOS Sierra and the addition of several new features. The company also announced a new standalone app called Parallels. Install Sierra as guest OS in VM with Parallels 12. Ask Question. Up vote 6 down vote favorite. The ISO Image should also work in Parallels Desktop. I just tested making an ISO of High Sierra 10.13 and creating a Parallels VM using it and had success. I tried using the 10.13 updated script that @cobberboy posted, which worked to. Worked for me on a MacBook Pro running Sierra 10.12.3 as host, with a guest OS of Sierra 10.12.4 when using Parallels 12.2.0. Suspend VM, resume Another solution is to “suspend” the entire virtual machine from Parallels Desktop > Control Panel and immediately “resume”.
While beta releases of operating systems are not officially supported by Parallels Desktop® 12 for Mac, they will often more or less work. I have installed dozens of beta releases in Parallels Desktop, and I consider this to be the best method for experiencing an early version of a new OS. Beta releases of operating systems usually have a variety of “issues.” Even if you encounter one of these issues, any ramifications will be limited to only the virtual machine (VM), so this is a safe and easy way to check out a new operating system.
Figure 1_Downloading the High Sierra installer from the App Store
Figure 2_The installation app for the High Sierra Developer beta
Figure 3_Running the High Sierra installer. Notice that there are two instances of Sierra shown in this figure_ the OS Sierra host and the OS Sierra guest which will be upgraded to High Sierra
Figure 4_Don’t upgrade the VM’s file system to APFS
Figure 6_macOS High Sierra running in a Parallels Desktop 12 virtual machine
Of course, there might be other ways to get High Sierra running in VM, but the above steps worked for me.
However, remember that Parallels doesn’t officially support the Developer Preview of High Sierra. If you do create a High Sierra VM, we would like to hear about any issues you experience. If you used different steps than I used, please also tell us what worked and what didn’t work for you. You can comment below or reach out to our social community via Facebook or Twitter (@ParallelsMac). Beta software is beta software, so make sure to backup, don’t use the beta VM for any real work, and be ready for bugs.
Note that I haven’t yet tackled the opposite task: running Parallels Desktop on High Sierra. To do this, I have to find a spare Mac® on which I can install High Sierra, and then run Windows and other OSes on this High Sierra Mac. Of course, I will also want to see if the High Sierra VM will run in Parallels Desktop on High Sierra. This will be like figure 3, but instead of two instances of Sierra, there will be two instances of High Sierra. I am looking forward to telling you of my efforts in a future blog post.
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