Mac Os X For Ppc



Rather than scour various forum posts i've decided to put some of my contributions here.

  1. Mac Os X 10.4 Tiger For Ppc
  2. Mac Os X 10.4 Ppc Iso
  3. Mac Os X For Ppc 7
  4. Mac Os X For Ppc Software
  5. Mac Os X 10.4 Ppc Install Dvd.iso
  6. Mac Os X For Ppc 13

Adium is a free and open source instant messaging application for Mac OS X, written using Mac OS X's Cocoa API, released under the GNU GPL and developed by the Adium team. System Requirements: 1.4.5: Mac OS X 10.5.8 Leopard — 1.3.10: Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. Get it for PowerPC or 32bit Intel. Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger. Mac OS X 10.4.7 or later is required. Get it for PowerPC or Intel. Mac OS X 10.3 Panther. QuickTime 6.5.2 or later is required. Get it for PowerPC. Install Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard via USB on PowerPC Macs (youtube) And if your iBook is the same, not working with the above USB method then you may need to try the Open Firmware approach to boot from USB: Install OSX 10.5 Leopard on Powerbook G4 (a1138) with a USB drive! WITH 10.5 LEOPARD IMAGE.

These are things i've either created, ported, forked, compiled or contributed to.
PowerPC Mac OS X 10.4 and 10.5
Mac Os X For PpcArctic Fox web browser : info and download
IceWeasel-PPC web browser : info and download
TenFiveTube & YewTube apps to watch YouTube : info and download (10.5 only)
Facebook, Twitter and Sound Cloud mobile apps : info and download (10.5 only)
Google Hangouts app : info and download (10.5 only)
Facebook Messenger app : info and download (10.5 only)
PPCBrowser lightweight webkit browser : info and download
TenFourKit webkit browser duckduckgo start page mod : download (10.4 only)
LMMS Linux MultiMedia Studio : homepagedownload (10.5 only)
Intel Mac OS X 10.6 and above
SpiderWeb browser : download and info
Arctic Fox web browser : downloadinfosource
Browser lightweight webkit browser : download
Facebook and Twitter mobile apps : info and download
Sound Cloud mobile app : download
Yewtube tonvid/youtube app : info and download
HookTubeX hooktube/youtube app : info and download
Pale Moon 27.9.4 web browser (32-bit) : download
Pale Moon 27.9.4 web browser (64-bit) : download
Intel Mac OS X 10.7 and above
InterWeb web browser : download and info
SpiderWeb browser and e-mail client : info and download
PowerPC Linux (32-bit) Ubuntu 16.04 / Debian 10 / Fienix
Lubuntu 12.04 & 16.04 Remix (live CD / DVD + installer) : info and downloadMac
Debian Sid Remix : Info and download
Arctic Fox web browser : (see links above for OS X 10.6)
SpiderWeb browser : info and download
SpiderMail e-mail/news/rss : info and download
InterWeb browser : Info and download


Extra rebuilt packages for 16.04+ : Download Repository
Other useful links
Mac PowerPC

Blog 2020/5/7

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Here are some notes on how I set up an installation of OS X Tiger (10.4)on an emulated PowerPC G4 using QEMU,on a modern x86_64 Mac.

This setup was performed using QEMU 5.0.0 (obtained via brew install qemu).

Note: at some point during this process -cdrom /dev/cdrom seems to have stopped working, but -cdrom /dev/disk2 works.

Step 1: Initial installation

In this step we will format the disk and perform the initial OS X installation.

Download a copy of the2Z691-5305-A OS X Tiger installation DVDand burn it to a physical DVD.

Note: for some reason qemu does not seem to be able to boot .iso files of the OS X installation DVD (using -cdrom tiger.iso),but if you burn that .iso to a physical DVD and then use -cdrom /dev/disk2, it works.

Boot the DVD to verify it works:

If you see the grey Apple logo, the DVD is working correctly with QEMU:

Quit QEMU and create a 127GB QEMU disk:

Boot the install DVD with the disk attached and being the installation. QEMU will exit when the installer reboots.

When the installer reaches the disk selection screen, there will be no disks to choose from, because the disk has not been partitioned yet:

Mac Os X For Ppc

Start up Disk Utility:

'Erase' the disk to partition and format it:

Quit Disk Utility and the installer should now see the newly formatted partition:

The install will take quite some time (over an hour). When it completes, it will reboot, which will cause QEMU to exit (due to the -no-reboot flag).

At this point you may (physically) eject the installation DVD (from your host Mac).

Mark the disk as read-only to prevent any accidental writes to it (which would cause any snapshots based on this disk to become corrupt):

Step 2: User account creation, system updates

In this step we will create a user account and install all of the system updates.

Create a snapshot of the disk (think of this as forking the hard drive):

The system updates can either be installed using the Software Update utility (iteratively repeated across many reboots),or you can download and install them manually.

The manual route is quicker because some of the updates are bundled, and you don't have to wait on Software Update to detect which updates have / haven't been installed yet.

To install the updates manually,download (on your host Mac) item #29 (Tiger_Updates.dmg_.zip)from the 'Mac OS X for PPC' pageof macintoshgarden.org.

Unzip that file and convert the dmg to a DVD image:

We can now use tiger-updates.cdr as a virtual DVD with QEMU.

Boot the G4 and create a user account:

Note: if you plan on using Software Update rather than tiger-updates.cdr, you man omit the -cdrom tiger-updates.cdr line from the above command.

Note: this boot may take several minutes to get started.

This install was set up with user macuser and password macuser:

This installation was set up with the Central timezone:

Disable the screen saver and power-saving features:

Open up System Preferences and:

  • Display & Screen Saver -> Screensaver -> Start screen saver -> Never
  • Energy Saver
    • Put the computer to sleep when it is inactive for -> Never
    • Put the display to sleep when the computer is inactive for -> Never

If you did not use Software Update, open up the Tiger_Updates 'DVD' and install all of the updates:

If you go with the updates DVD route, make sure you run Software Update at the end just to be sure you've covered everything.

Mark the snapshot read-only to prevent accidental writes to it:

Step 3: Web browser, video player, text editor

In this step we will install TenFourFox, VLC and TextWrangler.

Create a snapshot of the disk:

TenFourFox is a fork of the Firefox web browser which is currently supported on Tiger/PPC.Their website links to the latest version,FPR22.

The latest version of VLCfor Tiger/PPC is 0.9.10,which is still available from their downloads page.

Mac os x 10.4 ppc iso

The latest version of TextWranglerfor Tiger/PPC is 3.1,available via Bare Bonesor macintoshgarden.org.

Strangely, no combination of using Disk Utility and hdiutil to create .dmg or .cdr images of TenFourFox.app seemed to work with Tiger:

Note: in retrospect, perhaps this was an APFS vs. HFS+ issue?

I resorted to burning TenFourFox, VLC, and TextWrangler to a physical DVD and passing it through to QEMU.

Note: even burning to a physical CD-ROM didn't work -- it had to be a DVD.

Mac Os X 10.4 Tiger For Ppc

Drag the applications into /Applications.

Shutdown the G4 and mark the disk read-only:

Step 4: Xcode, Tigerbrew

Mac Os X 10.4 Ppc Iso

In this step we will set up a development environment for building modern Unix software.

Create a snapshot of the disk:

The latest version of Xcode Tools for Tiger/PPC is 2.5,which is still available via Apple (search for 'xcode 2.5' at https://developer.apple.com/download/more/, requires login),or via macintoshgarden.orgfrom their Xcode page.

Again, I had to burn this to a physical DVD in order to use it with QEMU.

Boot the G4 and install the Xcode Tools:

Tigerbrewis a fork of Homebrewfor PowerPC Macs running Tiger or Leopard.

Open up a terminal on the emulated G4 and use the following commands to install Tigerbrew:

Also, change Terminal.app to spawn a 'login' bash shell:

Mac Os X For Ppc 7

  • Terminal -> Preferences -> Execute this command -> /bin/bash -l

Don't forget to mark the disk image read-only:

Using these QEMU hard drive images

At this point we've created a series of four chained hard drive images:

We can squash these images into a single, combined, stand-alone hard drive image:

We can then boot using that combined image directly, without the use of any snapshots.This is analogous to having a real Mac with a physical hard drive:

Or, we could treat combined.qcow2 as a 'golden master'and create snapshots based off of it, perhaps to try out some experimental tigerbrew packages:

Perhaps in experiment-1.qcow2 we try out gcc-7, and in experiment-2.qcow2 we try out llvm, etc.

Each of these snapshots can be used with the above command line as the -hda argument:

  • qemu-system-ppc ... -hda experiment-2.qcow2

We could even create further branches off of e.g. experiment-2.qcow2:

Perhaps we decide that experiment-2B.qcow2 was the keeper and the rest can be gotten rid of?

combined.qcow2 now contains the changes from experiment-2.qcow2 and experiment-2B.qcow2.

Mac Os X For Ppc Software

Thus far we've been branching off of the 'tip',but we could just as easily branch off several points in the snapshot tree.For example, if we hadn't merged the images into combined.qcow2,we could make a 'daily driver' snapshot for web browsing based off of 3-browser.qcow2,and a 'dev box' for doing development work based off of 4-tigerbrew.qcow2:

Let's say we accidentally hosed our dev box with a careless rm -rf /. Starting over with a new dev box is trivial:

Mac Os X 10.4 Ppc Install Dvd.iso

Etc :)

Mac Os X For Ppc 13

Resources: