However, I suspect a USB bluetooth dongle would work with the UTM USB passthrough. The one thing I’ve noticed lacking is Bluetooth from the Mac’s motherboard. I’ve been running this for over a month now and it has taken itself through a number of HA version upgrades and one OS upgrade. ![]() It says up to 20 mins but I think mine took longer. Note, it will restart a few times while setting itself up and once running and you connect to the address, it will take a long time to “Prepare” itself. Viola, you have a fully functional HassOS that will start up and configure itself. New Drive > IDE > Import: select the ‘haos_ova-8.5.qcow2’ image file previously extracted.This is the name of your computers internal Bluetooth adapter. Network > Network mode: select ‘Bridged (Advanced)’ If theres no Bluetooth icon in your menu bar, go to system prefs -> Bluetooth and check 'Show Bluetooth in menu bar' With the external dongle unplugged, option+click on the Bluetooth icon in your menu bar Note the sequence of letters and numbers after 'Address:'.Storage: 32 GB (use more if you want but not sure if this has any effect on the image) Have installed 5.17.1-051701-generic on Ubuntu 22.04.1 and still have the problem lsusb: Bus 005 Device 002: ID 0a12:0001 Cambridge Silicon Radio, Ltd Bluetooth Dongle (HCI mode) Have tried with 6.0.7-060007-generic and still same output 3.776546 Bluetooth: Core ver 2.22 3.For Boot ISO Image, choose: ‘Skip ISO Boot’.Open UTM and create a new VM using EMULATE > Other I just bought a mini bluetooth dongle and had some problems at first to get it to work under Snow Leopard, Here is how I got it work First here is the info for the device from System Profiler when i first plug it in Bluetooth HCI: Product ID: 0x0001 Vendor ID: 0x0a12 (Cambridge Silicon Radio Ltd.) Version: 1.Then double-click it to extract the files to use the ‘haos_ova-8.5.qcow2’ image inside. ![]() Questions or comments on any of those articles is of course welcome, and thanks guys for the earlier posts, some valuable information in this thread! However in almost all cases I would recommend the UTM approach, as running Core without supervisor will be lacking some features, such as the add-ons store. If anyone is looking to run Home Assistant Core natively on Mac OS using venv, I covered it in one of my older tutorials that you can check out here and can confirm it works on M1 Mac. How To Run Home Assistant Supervised On Mac OS (For M1 Macs) - This is a complete guide to setting up Home Assistant supervised using UTM on a Mac M1.įor those of you who were reluctant to use UTM due to it not having an option to start on booting Mac OS, it is actually rather simple to get UTM to launch the Home Assistant VM on boot, there is a section that explains how to do this in the aforementioned article. I have some tutorials that may be of interest, relating to the discussion in this thread
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