
Once the setting has been applied, a system reboot will be required and your PCIe devices will show up properly. I am also happy to announce that this issue has been resolved and ESXi can now see PCIe devices that are attached to the Thunderbolt 3 ports.Īn ESXi Advanced Setting change is required for Thunderbolt 3 to work correctly and the following command will need to be executed after installing ESXi:Įsxcli system settings kernel set -s pciExperimentalFlags -v 16 Thunderbolt 3Īnother impact of a T2-based Apple system with ESXi is that storage and networking devices connected to the Thunderbolt 3 ports are not visible. This now means a MacOS Guest will be able to properly boot on a T2-based Apple system. I am very happy to announce that this issue has been resolved and ESXi can now properly recognize the Apple System Management Controller (SMC) device which is used as part of the MacOS Guest start up process. One of the biggest issue which I had observed when using a T2-based Apple system with ESXi is that it would fail to boot a MacOS Guest and just keep rebooting the VM.
#VMWARE ESXI 6.7 MAC ADD STORAGE UPDATE#
Today, I would like to share a pretty significant update as a result of some of these efforts.
#VMWARE ESXI 6.7 MAC ADD STORAGE PRO#
Although there has not been any news in some time regarding the support for ESXi on the latest Apple Mac Mini 2018 and the recently released Apple Mac Pro 2019, there has definitely been work happening behind the scenes at VMware.
