<br><tt><div style="background-color:#dddddd; margin:0px; padding:10px; width:650px; overflow:auto; font-size:100%;"> The following devices are available for instaillation:
<br>1. VMware Virtual IDE Hard Drive @ disk0 (6.0G)
<br>2. VMware Virtual IDE Hard Drive @ disk1 (19.1G)
<br>Enter 'shell' to drop into a shell
<br>Which device would you like to install Darwin onto? <font color=red>2</font>
<br>
<br>For partitioning the disk, you have the following choices:
<br>1) Auto-partition the disk (Destroys all disk contents)
<br><tt><div style="background-color:#dddddd; margin:0px; padding:10px; width:650px; overflow:auto; font-size:100%;"> The following partitions are available:
<br>/dev/disk1s1
<br>Which will be the root partition?
<br><font color=red>/dev/disk1s1</font>
<br>
<br>Choose the filesystem type from the following.
<br> hfs) HFS+ (journaled) filesystem
<br> ufs) UFS filesystem
<br>Filesystem type: <font color=red>hfs</font>
<br>
<br>Would you like to do a clean install? (yes/no) <font color=red>yes</font>
<br><tt><div style="background-color:#dddddd; margin:0px; padding:10px; width:650px; overflow:auto; font-size:100%;"> This hardware configuration is not supported by Darwin/x86.
<br><tt><div style="background-color:#dddddd; margin:0px; padding:10px; width:650px; overflow:auto; font-size:100%;"> The boot: prompt waits for you to type advanced startup options.
<br>If you don't type anything, the computer continues starting up normally. It
<br>uses the kernel and configuration files on the startup device, which it also
<br>uses as the root device. Advanced startup options use the following syntax:
<br><tt><div style="background-color:#dddddd; margin:0px; padding:10px; width:650px; overflow:auto; font-size:100%;"> If you want to make modifications to files:
<br> /sbin/fsck -fy
<br> /sbin/mount -uw /
<br>
<br>If you wish to boot the system, but stay in single user mode:
<br>Cannot open the disk 'c:\Documents and Settings\Administrator\my Documents\My Virtual Machines\Other\Other.vmdk' or one of the snapshot disks it depends on.
<br>Reason: The partition table on the physical disk has changed since the disk was created.
<br>Remove the physical disk from the virtual machine, then add it again.