![]() ![]() ![]() It had to be my fault.įast-forward to a few mornings later. R 4.1.1 binary for macOS 10.13 ( High Sierra) and higher, Intel 64-bit build, signed and notarized package. I start my vagrant VM, and to my surprise Vagrant can’t connect to it via SSH. Contains R 4.1.1 framework, R.app GUI 1.77 in 64-bit for Intel Macs, Tcl/Tk 8.6.6 X11 libraries and Texinfo 6.7. The latter two components are optional and can be ommitted when choosing 'custom install', they are only needed if you want. I try again, make sure the network works, and end up re-provisioning the VM. To my surprise, I am greeted with a kernel panic inside the VM. Okay, It must be me, it must be something I installed since the last time I used the VM. Intel Power Gadget is a neat tiny tool (Intel-made) that shows statistics about an Intel CPU and GPU. I can be useful to gain some insight on a system, and is also required for showing frequencies in iStat Menus. However, it installs a Kernel extension ( EnergyDriver.kext), which is needed for accessing the data, or so I suppose. My guts were telling me that is was this kernel module that was messing with my VMs, although according to macOS system logs, nothing was wrong.Īfter a quick brew zap and a reboot, I was finally able to provision my VM peacefully. I’m still mad about this but if it saves someone precious hours of their lives, my job here is done.Īs I said using multiple versions of VirtualBox didn’t help, and I’m not sure it is tied to a specific macOS version, although I’m on Mojave 10.15.3. The Intel Power Gadget version I installed was 3.7.0. My other Macbook Pro with the exact same version of macOS but Intel Power Gadget 3.6.0 does not seem affected. #INTEL POWER GADGET INSTALLATION FAILED MAC PRO# #INTEL POWER GADGET INSTALLATION FAILED MAC MAC#.#INTEL POWER GADGET INSTALLATION FAILED MAC PRO#. ![]()
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