This behavior is not affected by enabling/disabling 3D support or 2D video acceleration (it happens whenever Unscaled HiDPI is enabled, regardless of 3D or 2D accel settings, although due to #14349/ #14231, I have to disable 3D in the Windows 10 guest to use HiDPI that was reported for 5.0.x and is still a problem in 5.1.2). Both guests have the 5.1.2 guest additions installed.
However on the text console (Ctrl+Alt+F1) any typing or cursor movement is replaced by grey rectangles.įor both guests, minimizing the VM window and unminimzing it will temporarily restore the screen, until something else is updated, as will clicking the close button to bring up the save state/ACPI shutdown/force off menu, which dims the guest window while the menu is up, and also temporarily "fixes" the screen. Arch Linux is an independently developed, x86-64 general-purpose Linux distribution that strives to provide the latest stable versions of most software by.
On an Ubuntu 16.04 guest, I see this on the login screen, but not very much within the desktop. On a Windows 10 guest, this follows the mouse pointer (see video), as well as creating larger grey rectangles in updated fields.
But it will be never be as full featured as macOS on the M1 because no device drivers exist for it on the M1 platform. Apple Silicon is built with ARM chips, so it is not surprising that ARM Linux could be ported to it. With "Unscaled HiDPI output" enabled, the areas of the screen being updated are overwritten with grey rectangles. Asahi Linux is a distro built on existing ARM based Linux. Host is VirtualBox 5.1.2 on OS X 10.11.6, iMac Retina 5K late 2015. Installing OSX, Arch and Windows is left as an exercise for you to figure out.This is a regression with 5.1.2 that did not occur with 5.0.26. Setup these partitions: /dev/sda5 Apple HFS/HSF+ "Apple boot" /dev/sda6 ext4 "boot" /dev/sda7 ext4 "/ root file system" This file system layout assumes you're installing Arch Linux along side OSX. Enter fdisk -l at the shell to list all the disks. Create the partitions, this can be done in OSX with the disk utility wizard, this guide though uses fdisk. Only having Arch installed is not recommended because Apple release firmware updates via the OSX App store, these could contain crucial bug fixes or security patches so it's important. some MAME 2003 Retroarch cores I compiled Open source front-end for Linux. Once Linux has booted you'll be at the shell, this is where you're going to setup your disks. You know - the thinnest and lightest MacBook to date (even thinner than the MacBook Air), with a 12 inch retina display, the Intel Core M processor, a single USB-C port, and the new force touch trackpad.
While the computer restarts hold down ALT on the keyboard to bring up Apple's EFI bootloader. So Apple has just started taking orders for the new 2015 MacBook. Plug your USB drive into your Macbook and restart your computer. Also dd overwrites anything on the drive. Use dd like this: dd if=archlinux.iso of=/dev/sdx bs=4M status=progress & sync the status=progress option was added in Coreutils 2.81 so check you're using an up-to date version of Coreutils before trying this command. Installation Download the latest ISO from Arch Linux.
Boot the MacBook Pro from said USB drive (hold option key at startup to choose it). Access to WiFi (lots of other guides say WiFi does not work out of the box but as of January 2020 I assume the kernel module for WiFi card has been included?) or an Apple Thunderbolt to Gigabit Ethernet adapter. The first part of the process involves prepping the software side of the Mac by doing the following: Build a USB boot drive with Arch Linux.
Access to another computer to use dd on, such as: OSX, Linux any unix. I have a MacBook Pro 11,3 (13-inch) with Retina display. What you need for this tutorial are: A USB thumb drive. - Wednesday, 25 February 2015, 12:50 GMT Last edited by Antonio Rojas (arojas) - Sunday, 20 September 2015, 06:01 GMT Task Type: Bug Report: Category: Packages: Extra. It also includes loads of other helpful guides written by other authors which may help you fix a problem. The Arch wiki has loads of information if you get stuck.