![]() On that page, user kevinp2 posted this gem: There are many, but I got quite lucky-the first search result had the answer, though it's buried on the very last page of the discussion. Today I went back to the VMware forums and started digging through all the posts that matched /dev/vmmon broken pipe. So I gave up for the evening, and tackled the problem again this morning. ![]() To say I was aggravated would be an understatement. Nope, same issue-the kexts wouldn't load.īy this time, through all the fixes and changes I had tried, I had probably rebooted close to 50 times. I was thinking that, for certain, this should solve the problem. I then rebooted and installed from scratch. If you have an account, you should be able to download it via this URL.īefore I reinstalled, I did a complete manual uninstallation, removing all traces of VMware Fusion (and its three kexts) from my system. Thankfully, VMware makes the version 11 installer available on their customer portal. I thought I might be stuck here, as being on Mojave, I needed the installer for version 11 of Fusion, not the current version 12. I then realized I hadn't followed one of the steps in the knowledge base article, which was a reinstall. Run this command in the Terminal window, changing the string at the end to match what you wrote down in the prior step: /usr/sbin/spctl kext-consent add EG7KH642X6. ![]() Reboot into Recovery mode by holding Command-R at reboot, then launch Terminal from the menu.You need it somewhere not on your Mac, because you won't have access to it when you need it. For Fusion 11.5.7, it should be EG7KH642X6. ![]()
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