At the end of 2020 Apple released Macintosh computers with a dramatic shift in hardware, leaving behind the Intel x86 based CPU’s and using their own in house M1 arm based CPU’s. This shift meant software had to be recompiled or rearchitected to run natively on the M1 processor. While some x86 based apps will run under Apple’s Rosetta software others will not. Running Hana on the mac requires running in a supported virtual machine, none of which will run x86 based virtual machine images on M1 Macs. However, after some research, and trial and error I’ve figured out a way to run Hana Express on M1 Macs.
Steps to Run
First off you will need to install a freeware virtual machine called UTM. You can download that here:
You will then need to obtain the Hana Express virtual machine image. You will have to first register for an account following these steps:
https://developers.sap.com/tutorials/hxe-ua-register.html
Then download the virtual machine following these steps. This will guide you to download and run the Hana Express Download Manager. When running the Download Manager make sure to download the “Server only virtual machine” VM image. This means you will end up with a file called hxe.ova. Note down where the hxe.ova file is saved.
https://developers.sap.com/tutorials/hxe-ua-download-vm.html
Once the download has completed open a Terminal window and navigate to where the file was downloaded.
First the hxe.ova file will have to be renamed to hxe.tgz. Type the following command in the Terminal to do this:
mv hxe.ova hxe.tgz
Next the compressed image will have to be uncompressed through this command:
tar xvf hxe.tgz
Once the decompression has completed, there will be a few files in the directory. The target file for the next step is: hxe-disk1.vmdk.gz
This file will also need to be uncompressed:
gunzip hxe-disk1.vmdk.gz
This will result in a file called hxe-disk1.vmdk
The hxe-disk1.vmdk file will need to be converted to a format UTM can read which is a QCOW2 file.
If you don’t already have homebrew installed please install it from here: https://brew.sh/
Once you have homebrew you can install a utility called QEMU that will convert the hxe-disk1.vmdk file to a QCOW2 file. Install QEMU through homebrew as follows:
brew install qemu
With QEMU installed run the following to convert to the qcow2 format:
qemu-img convert -f vmdk -O qcow2 hxe-disk1.vmdk hxe-disk1.qcow2
Now UTM can be launched and a new VM can be added by pressing the + button:
Next choose the Emulate button:
On the next screen choose other:
After that make sure the Skip ISO boot checkbox is checked:
On the next screen titled Hardware set the memory to 8124MB minimum.
The Storage and Shared Directory screens can be left to their default settings. And on the Summary page press Save.
Back on the main UTM page, make sure you new VM is selected and press the settings button seen in this screenshot:
Under the System settings section we need to change the default CPU to “Enables all features supported by the accelerator in the current host (max)“
In the QEMU section UEFI needs to be unchecked:
And in the IDE section, press the red Delete Drive button to delete the current drive:
Then press the New Drive button and set the settings as seen here and press the Import button:
On the Import screen choose the qcow2 file that we generated in the previous steps and once that is done press Save.
Back on the main UTM screen you can now press the play button on the new VM to start it and then follow the normal Hana setup steps as detailed in these two tutorials:
https://developers.sap.com/tutorials/hxe-ua-keyboard-vm.html
then
https://developers.sap.com/tutorials/hxe-ua-getting-started-vm-xsa.html
A few notes about the setup, the user to connect to the fully setup database will be SYSTEM and the jdbc port will be 39015.
In this blog we have learned how to prepare the Hana Express VM to be imported into UTM. We have also learned how to setup UTM to host the Hana Express VM. And most importantly we have Hana Express running on the M1 Mac!
Please let me know if you have any questions or feedback for this post. I hope this helps you get started with Hana!