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Mac Emulator For Window



As I wrap-up this article on the best Windows emulators for Mac, I would like to mention that although people use virtualization and emulation interchangeably today, the above tools are virtualization tools.


Which is the best Mac emulator for Windows? How to install a macOS virtual machine on PC? In this post, MiniTool Partition Wizard gives you a step-by-step guide on how to install a macOS virtual machine on PC via VMware.




Mac Emulator For Window




However, installing hackintoshes is very complicated. If your PC's specs are not very bad, installing a macOS virtual machine is recommended. Then, which is the best Mac emulator for Windows? Most people will choose between VirtualBox and VMware. I am of no exception.


Fortunately, my colleague in technical department has ever succeeded in installing a macOS virtual machine with VMware. Thanks to him, this post can be completed smoothly. So, in my mind, VMware is the best Mac emulator for Windows, although this judgment is a little subjective.


Step 3: Extract the unlocker.zip file. Open the extracted folder to find win-install.cmd file. Right click this file and choose Run as administrator. Then, this file will run to get some tools for VMware. All you need do is to wait for the window to shut down automatically.


Step 2: In the window, drag the arrow to resize the partition. If you drag the whole partition block, you can change the location of the partition. Through this way, you can make unallocated space on the location you want. Click the OK button to continue.


Step 5: Go to VM > Settings. In the Virtual Machine Settings window, you can change the macOS hardware settings. I recommend you to change the Memory to at least 4GB, otherwise the macOS virtual machine will not run smoothly. Click OK to save changes.


Do you want to run Mac on Windows? Installing hackintoshes on PC may be complicated. You can try using a Mac emulator for Windows. This post gives you a step-by-step guide on how to install a macOS virtual machine on Windows PC via VMware.Click to Tweet


Is this post useful to you? Have you encountered problem when following the above steps to install macOS virtual machine? Do you know other good Mac emulators for Windows? Please leave a comment in the following zone.


The Azure Cosmos DB Emulator provides a local environment that emulates the Azure Cosmos DB service for development purposes. Using the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, you can develop and test your application locally, without creating an Azure subscription or incurring any costs. When you're satisfied with how your application is working in the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, you can switch to using an Azure Cosmos DB account in the cloud. This article describes how to install and use the emulator on Windows, Linux, macOS, and Windows docker environments.


To get started, download and install the latest version of Azure Cosmos DB Emulator on your local computer. The emulator release notes article lists all the available versions and the feature updates that were made in each release.


You can develop applications using Azure Cosmos DB Emulator with the account using the APIs for NoSQL, Apache Cassandra, MongoDB, Apache Gremlin, and Table. Currently the data explorer in the emulator fully supports viewing SQL data only; the data created using MongoDB, Gremlin/Graph and Cassandra client applications it is not viewable at this time. To learn more, see how to connect to the emulator endpoint from different APIs.


While emulation of the Azure Cosmos DB service is faithful, the emulator's implementation is different than the service. For example, the emulator uses standard OS components such as the local file system for persistence, and the HTTPS protocol stack for connectivity. Functionality that relies on the Azure infrastructure like global replication, single-digit millisecond latency for reads/writes, and tunable consistency levels are not applicable when you use the emulator.


Because the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator provides an emulated environment that runs on the local developer workstation, there are some differences in functionality between the emulator and an Azure Cosmos DB account in the cloud:


Currently the Data Explorer pane in the emulator fully supports API for NoSQL clients only. The Data Explorer view and operations for Azure Cosmos DB APIs such as MongoDB, Table, Graph, and Cassandra APIs are not fully supported.


The emulator supports only a single fixed account and a well-known primary key. You can't regenerate key when using the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, however you can change the default key by using the command-line option.


The emulator is not a scalable service and it doesn't support a large number of containers. When using the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, by default, you can create up to 25 fixed size containers at 400 RU/s (only supported using Azure Cosmos DB SDKs), or 5 unlimited containers. For more information on how to change this value, see Set the PartitionCount value article.


To install, configure, and run the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, you must have administrative privileges on the computer. The emulator will add a certificate and also set the firewall rules in order to run its services. Therefore admin rights are necessary for the emulator to be able to execute such operations.


To get started, download and install the latest version of Azure Cosmos DB Emulator on your local computer. If you run into any issues when installing the emulator, see the emulator troubleshooting article to debug.


After installation, if you have used the default settings, the data corresponding to the emulator is saved at %LOCALAPPDATA%\CosmosDBEmulator location. You can configure a different location by using the optional data path settings; that is the /DataPath=PREFERRED_LOCATION as the command-line parameter. The data created in one version of the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator is not guaranteed to be accessible when using a different version. If you need to persist your data for the long term, it is recommended that you store that data in an Azure Cosmos DB account, instead of the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator.


The Azure Cosmos DB Emulator is installed at C:\Program Files\Azure Cosmos DB Emulator location by default. To start the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator on Windows, select the Start button or press the Windows key. Begin typing Azure Cosmos DB Emulator, and select the emulator from the list of applications.


When the emulator has started, you'll see an icon in the Windows taskbar notification area. It automatically opens the Azure Cosmos DB data explorer in your browser at this URL :8081/_explorer/index.html URL.


Currently, the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator can only be run on Windows. If you are using Linux or macOS, we recommend you use the Linux Emulator (Preview) or run the emulator in a Windows virtual machine hosted in a hypervisor such as Parallels or VirtualBox.


From the Windows VM, launch the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator from the command line using the following options. For details on the parameters supported by the command line, see the emulator command-line tool reference:


Finally, you need to resolve the certificate trust process between the application running on the Linux or Mac environment and the emulator. You can use one of the following two options to resolve the certificate:


If you have multiple machines using a single network, and if you set up the emulator on one machine and want to access it from other machine. In such case, you need to enable access to the emulator on a local network.


You can run the emulator on a local network. To enable network access, specify the /AllowNetworkAccess option at the command-line, which also requires that you specify /Key=key_string or /KeyFile=file_name. You can use /GenKeyFile=file_name to generate a file with a random key upfront. Then you can pass that to /KeyFile=file_name or /Key=contents_of_file.


If you have started the emulator with the /Key option, then use the generated key instead of the default key C2y6yDjf5/R+ob0N8A7Cgv30VRDJIWEHLM+4QDU5DE2nQ9nDuVTqobD4b8mGGyPMbIZnqyMsEcaGQy67XIw/Jw==. For more information about /Key option, see Command-line tool reference.


Once you have the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator running on your desktop, you can use any supported Azure Cosmos DB SDK or the Azure Cosmos DB REST API to interact with the emulator. The Azure Cosmos DB Emulator also includes a built-in data explorer that lets you create containers for API for NoSQL or MongoDB. By using the data explorer, you can view and edit items without writing any code.


Once you have the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator running on your desktop, you can use the Azure Cosmos DB's API for MongoDB to interact with the emulator. Start the emulator from command prompt as an administrator with "/EnableMongoDbEndpoint". Then use the following connection string to connect to the API for MongoDB account:


Once you have the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator running on your desktop, you can use the Azure Cosmos DB API for Table SDK to interact with the emulator. Start the emulator from command prompt as an administrator with "/EnableTableEndpoint". Next run the following code to connect to the API for Table account:


Exit all the open instances of the local emulator by right-clicking the Azure Cosmos DB Emulator icon on the system tray, and then select Exit. It may take a minute for all instances to exit.


Wine (originally an acronym for "Wine Is Not an Emulator") is a compatibility layer capable of running Windows applications on several POSIX-compliant operating systems, such as Linux, macOS, & BSD. Instead of simulating internal Windows logic like a virtual machine or emulator, Wine translates Windows API calls into POSIX calls on-the-fly, eliminating the performance and memory penalties of other methods and allowing you to cleanly integrate Windows applications into your desktop. 2ff7e9595c


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