Close the Command Prompt, go back one step, then continue as normal and you'll be able to complete the Windows 11 installation process. I installed a Oracle VM Virtualbox to act as a sandbox containment for the virus so it does not cause damage to my host machine and the system and files it contains. Since it got my attention, i have the urge to test it out. This will add the necessary instructions into the registry to skip checks for both TPM and Secure Boot. I stumbled upon a website that provides a free download to a piece of software that im 90 convinced it is actually a virus. REG ADD HKLM\SYSTEM\Setup\LabConfig /v BypassTPMCheck /t REG_DWORD /d 1REG ADD HKLM\SYSTEM\Setup\LabConfig /v BypassSecureBootCheck /t REG_DWORD /d 1 This feature allows preserving the state of the guest OS to a specific point in time that can be restored on demand. The Snapshot feature in the virtual machine is similar to the Restore Point feature in Windows.
#HOW TO USE VIRTUALBOX FOR VIRUS TESTING INSTALL#
When you reach the error screen, hit Shift + F10 to open a Command Prompt and enter the following two commands. Once the virtual machine is up, we need to install the virtual operating system to get the virtual machine running. So, we'll just tell our VM to skip those checks.
Likewise, some can inject a virtual TPM, but most, again like VirtualBox, cannot currently. Some VM software, such as VMware, can handle the Secure Boot aspect, but VirtualBox, for example, cannot. This is down to two key Windows 11 hardware requirements: TPM 2.0 and Secure Boot. Whichever virtual machine tool you're using to install a Windows 11 VM with on Linux there's one thing you're more than likely going to come up against: an error saying your PC can't install it. Source: Windows Central (Image credit: Source: Windows Central)