![]() ![]() In my case that was fast, but running Java in the VM did not work anymore. With “Force Multicore” enabled more than 1 Core can be used from the Mac on the VM. In that case UTM can only use 1 core of the Mac. Everything runs very stable as long as the UTM System setting “Force Multicore” is not enabled. ![]() from Turing Software LLC (can be downloaded from the App Store) and costs $10įirst of all the good news is that I could install and run the 2 environments without any crash. I thought I’ll check that myself on what “very slow” means in terms of running an Oracle database in an emulated environment. The product UTM makes that easy as it adds a GUI on top of QEMU.Īccording lots of feedback on the internet the emulation is VERY SLOW. over VPN)Īnother potential alternative would be the emulation of x86-64 on ARM. So you need to carry the hardware with you or provide remote access to it, e.g. running the DB-server on separate hardware (requires access to separate hardware.runinng the DB-server VM on the Cloud (requires access to the cloud resources over the internet).REMARK: Oracle announced to port the DB software to ARM in the future. a Consultant with an Apple Laptop to be able to run tests against Oracle databases on that Laptop. as the Oracle Database does not run on ARM, a workaround is necessary for e.g. on Apple MacBook Pros with M1 or M2 processors). ARM architecture), it’s no longer possible to run VMs based on Intel x86-64 on Apple ARM (e.g. Since Apple moved to its own processor type (Apple Silicon, i.e. For testing purposes many IT-people traditionally use Virtual Machines (VMs) on their Laptops (often on Oracle Virtualbox). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |